Standings
Belarusian Cup · 2025Current Belarusian Cup 2025 standings with 14 teams. Yunost Minsk leads the table with 12 points after 6 matches, followed by Brest on 9 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.
| Team | Played | Won | OTL | Lost | Goals For:Goals Against | Goal Diff | Points | Form | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Group A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team1Yunost Minsk | Played6 | Won5 | OTL0 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against21:7 | Goal Diff+14 | Points12 | Form WWWWW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team2Brest | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against16:12 | Goal Diff+4 | Points9 | Form WLWLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team3Neman Grodno | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against13:14 | Goal Diff-1 | Points6 | Form WWLWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team4Soligorsk | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against16:17 | Goal Diff-1 | Points6 | Form WLLWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team5Molodechno | Played6 | Won2 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against10:11 | Goal Diff-1 | Points6 | Form WLLLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team6Lida | Played6 | Won1 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against13:16 | Goal Diff-3 | Points5 | Form LLWLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team7Baranavichy | Played6 | Won0 | OTL0 | Lost5 | Goals For:Goals Against8:20 | Goal Diff-12 | Points2 | Form LWLLL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Group B | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team1Vitebsk | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against18:10 | Goal Diff+8 | Points11 | Form WWLWW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team2Zhlobin | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against18:14 | Goal Diff+4 | Points9 | Form WWWLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team3Gomel | Played6 | Won2 | OTL0 | Lost2 | Goals For:Goals Against18:12 | Goal Diff+6 | Points7 | Form WWLLL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team4Mogilev | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against19:21 | Goal Diff-2 | Points6 | Form LWWWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team5Lokomotiv Orsha | Played6 | Won3 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against13:14 | Goal Diff-1 | Points6 | Form LWLLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team6Slavutych | Played6 | Won1 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against14:22 | Goal Diff-8 | Points5 | Form LLLWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team7Novopolotsk | Played6 | Won0 | OTL0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against7:14 | Goal Diff-7 | Points4 | Form LLWLL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Team Stats
Side-by-side performance comparison of all 14 teams in the Belarusian Cup. Yunost Minsk leads with 5 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, draws, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.
Top Scoring Teams
| Team | # | Played | Won | Lost | Goals For | Goals Against |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TeamYunost Minsk | #1 | Played6 | Won5 | Lost0 | Goals For21 | Goals Against7 |
| TeamBrest | #2 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost0 | Goals For16 | Goals Against12 |
| TeamNeman Grodno | #3 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost3 | Goals For13 | Goals Against14 |
| TeamSoligorsk | #4 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost3 | Goals For16 | Goals Against17 |
| TeamMolodechno | #5 | Played6 | Won2 | Lost3 | Goals For10 | Goals Against11 |
| TeamLida | #6 | Played6 | Won1 | Lost3 | Goals For13 | Goals Against16 |
| TeamBaranavichy | #7 | Played6 | Won0 | Lost5 | Goals For8 | Goals Against20 |
| TeamVitebsk | #8 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost0 | Goals For18 | Goals Against10 |
| TeamZhlobin | #9 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost1 | Goals For18 | Goals Against14 |
| TeamGomel | #10 | Played6 | Won2 | Lost2 | Goals For18 | Goals Against12 |
| TeamMogilev | #11 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost3 | Goals For19 | Goals Against21 |
| TeamLokomotiv Orsha | #12 | Played6 | Won3 | Lost3 | Goals For13 | Goals Against14 |
| TeamSlavutych | #13 | Played6 | Won1 | Lost3 | Goals For14 | Goals Against22 |
| TeamNovopolotsk | #14 | Played6 | Won0 | Lost3 | Goals For7 | Goals Against14 |
Past Seasons
Belarusian CupBrowse 11 archived seasons of the Belarusian Cup, from 2015 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.
History 19 Mar 2026
The Belarusian Cup was established in 2002 as the nation's premier domestic knockout competition following Belarus's development of an independent ice hockey infrastructure after Soviet independence. The inaugural 2002 edition featured a straightforward knockout format with Keramin Minsk defeating Tivali Minsk 5–2 in the final. The competition was renamed the Ruslan Salei Cup in 2013–14 to honor Ruslan Salei, the longtime Belarus national team captain and NHL veteran who tragically perished in the 2011 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash. Since its inception, the tournament has grown to encompass teams from both the Belarusian Extraliga and lower divisions, evolving to include a group stage format that precedes knockout playoffs. This structural development has enhanced competitive balance, allowing underdog clubs from regional centers to challenge established powerhouses and fostering talent development across the nation's hockey ecosystem.
- —2002 — Belarusian Cup founded as the national ice hockey knockout competition
- —2004–05 — Yunost Minsk claimed their first title, beginning a dynasty of success
- —2008 — Keramin Minsk won in overtime 4–3 against Yunost Minsk
- —2013–14 — Tournament renamed the Ruslan Salei Cup to honor the late Belarus national team captain
- —2020 — Yunost Minsk won the Cup despite COVID-19 pandemic disruptions
- —2024 — Yunost Minsk claimed their seventh title, defeating Shakhtyor Soligorsk in the final
Competition Format 19 Mar 2026
The Belarusian Cup employs a two-stage format designed to maximize competitive opportunity across the domestic hockey landscape. In the group stage, 12 teams are divided into two groups of six, playing round-robin matches within their respective groups to accumulate points. The top teams from each group advance to single-elimination semifinals and finals, where matches are played on a home-and-away basis with aggregate scoring determining progression. This structure balances competitive integrity with the practical need for teams to gain match fitness during the preseason or midseason window. The final match determines the national cup champion, providing an alternative path to glory independent of regular league standings and offering underdog clubs from lower divisions genuine opportunities to upset established powerhouses.
Records 19 Mar 2026
The 2025 season saw 14 matches played across the group stage with an average of 4.86 goals per match, indicating a high-scoring competition that favors attacking hockey.
Analysis 19 Mar 2026
Current Season Analysis
The 2025 Belarusian Cup group stage has delivered compelling competition across two balanced divisions. Yunost Minsk leads Group A with an impressive 5–0 record from six matches, accumulating 12 points and scoring 21 goals while conceding just 7, establishing a commanding ++14 goal. The Minsk powerhouse has demonstrated the attacking prowess and defensive solidity that defines their dynasty, with a win percentage of 83%. Vitebsk tops Group B with 12 from 6 matches (3 wins, 3 losses), maintaining a +8 goal difference despite facing tougher opposition. The group stage has produced 49 matches with an average of 4.86 goals per match, indicating a high-scoring tournament that emphasizes attacking hockey and creates betting value in over markets.
The title race features Yunost Minsk as the overwhelming favorites, given their perfect record and superior goal-scoring record. However, Vitebsk and Zhlobin (9 points, +4 goal difference) have positioned themselves as credible challengers from Group B, while Brest (9 points, +4 goal difference) remains competitive in Group A despite trailing Yunost by three points. The playoff structure will pit the group winners against lower-seeded qualifiers, creating potential upset opportunities for teams like Gomel (7 points, +6 goal difference) and Mogilev (6 points, -2 goal difference), which have demonstrated resilience against stronger opposition.
Baranavichy faces an uphill battle in Group A with just 2 points from 6 matches (0 wins, 5 losses), scoring only 8 goals while conceding 20 for a -12 goal difference. Similarly, Novopolotsk (4 points, -7 goal difference) struggles in Group B, though the group stage provides valuable experience for developing programs. Molodechno, Lida, Soligorsk, Neman Grodno, Lokomotiv Orsha, and Slavutych occupy the middle tier with 5–6 points each, maintaining realistic playoff aspirations but facing difficult paths through the knockout rounds.
The 2025 season stands in contrast to the 2024 campaign, which saw HK Neman Grodno upset the heavily favored Yunost Minsk in a thrilling two-leg semifinal series (6–4 at home, 1–2 away) to claim their third Cup title. That dramatic upset demonstrated the tournament's capacity to produce unexpected outcomes despite the dominance of established powerhouses. The current group stage data suggests the 2025 playoffs will likely feature Yunost Minsk as strong favorites, but the presence of several competitive mid-tier teams creates genuine uncertainty about which clubs will emerge from the knockout stage to contest the final.
Historical Dominance and Competitive Evolution
HC Yunost Minsk has established themselves as the Belarusian Cup's most successful franchise, claiming seven titles across two decades of competition. Their victories in 2004–05, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2019–20, and 2024–25 span multiple eras of Belarusian hockey development, demonstrating sustained excellence across different competitive landscapes. The club's dominance reflects institutional strength, consistent roster quality, and a development pipeline that has produced talent for both domestic and international competition. However, the 2023–24 season's upset victory by HK Neman Grodno (3 titles total) against Yunost in the semifinals illustrated that the tournament remains unpredictable when teams peak at the right moment during the knockout stage.
Dinamo Minsk emerged as a significant force following their entry into Belarusian competitions, capturing titles in 2005–06, 2006–07, 2020–21, and 2021–22. The club's four Cup victories position them as the second-most successful franchise historically, with a particularly strong period during the early 2020s when they claimed back-to-back titles. HK Gomel has also established themselves as a competitive presence, winning five titles across the competition's history, though their recent form suggests they remain in the development phase relative to Yunost and Dinamo. HK Neman Grodno (3 titles), Keramin Minsk (multiple early victories), and other regional clubs have demonstrated that the single-elimination format creates genuine opportunities for underdog advancement despite league standings.
Tournament Significance and National Development
The Belarusian Cup serves as a cornerstone of Belarus's domestic hockey infrastructure, functioning as both a competitive showcase and a talent identification mechanism for national team preparation. Regulations mandate that participating teams include quotas of young players—including at least three under-23 athletes and four under-27 field players—ensuring scouts and coaches can evaluate prospects in high-stakes matches against varied opposition. This integration bridges domestic and international play, with standout Cup contributors regularly earning call-ups to represent Belarus in IIHF World Championships and Olympic qualifiers. The tournament's emphasis on youth development has contributed to Belarus's competitive profile in international competitions, producing players who gain valuable experience in pressure situations before international exposure.
The group stage format employed since the tournament's evolution has enhanced competitive balance by allowing teams from lower divisions and regional centers to compete against Extraliga powerhouses in a balanced environment. Clubs like Brest, Neman Grodno, Soligorsk, and Molodechno gain prestige and momentum from cup participation, with successful cup runs often translating into improved regular league performance. The tournament's preseason or midseason timing allows clubs to assess roster quality, test tactical approaches, and build team cohesion before critical league fixtures. This practical benefit, combined with the prestige of winning a national cup, ensures sustained participation and genuine competitive effort from all 12 clubs.
Broadcasting and Commercial Impact
The Belarusian Cup benefits from mandatory national broadcast coverage, with matches distributed across Belarusian television and digital platforms to reach domestic audiences and regional viewership. The tournament's annual format and knockout structure create compelling storylines—particularly when regional rivals face elimination matches—that drive fan engagement and attendance across arenas in Minsk, Grodno, Vitebsk, Gomel, and other major hockey centers. Sponsor activations, national anthem performances, and fan-oriented ceremonies surrounding Cup matches elevate the event's cultural significance beyond pure sport, positioning it as a key mechanism for popularizing ice hockey and organizing public leisure activities that draw families and youth to hockey venues.
The commercial value of the Belarusian Cup extends beyond direct broadcast rights to encompass the prestige associated with winning a national championship and the marketing opportunities inherent in high-profile knockout matches. Clubs view Cup success as a pathway to enhanced sponsorship revenue, improved merchandise sales, and strengthened community relationships. The tournament's role in showcasing emerging talent also attracts international attention, with scouts from European leagues and NHL organizations monitoring performances to identify prospects for foreign competitions. This visibility contributes to Belarus's standing as a competitive hockey nation and provides export value for domestic talent development systems.
Looking Forward: 2025 Playoff Dynamics
As the 2025 group stage concludes and the playoff rounds commence, Yunost Minsk's perfect record and dominant goal difference position them as the clear favorites to add an eighth Cup title. However, the tournament's history of upsets—exemplified by Neman Grodno's 2024 semifinal victory and Keramin Minsk's 2008 overtime triumph—suggests that single-elimination hockey creates genuine uncertainty regardless of regular-season form. Vitebsk, Zhlobin, and Brest will likely emerge as the primary threats from the group stage, with each possessing sufficient quality to advance through the playoffs and potentially contest the final. The presence of competitive mid-tier teams ensures that playoff matches will feature genuine drama and tactical intensity, providing betting value for observers who recognize that knockout hockey rewards teams that peak at the right moment rather than those with the highest point totals.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many teams compete in the Belarusian Cup?
Twelve teams participate in the Belarusian Cup, typically drawn from the Belarusian Extraliga and lower divisions, divided into two groups of six for the group stage before knockout playoffs.
Who has won the most Belarusian Cup titles?
HC Yunost Minsk holds the record with seven Cup victories (2004–05, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2019–20, 2024–25), establishing themselves as the competition's most successful club.
What is the Ruslan Salei Cup?
The Belarusian Cup was renamed the Ruslan Salei Cup in 2013–14 to honor Ruslan Salei, the longtime Belarus national team captain and NHL veteran who died in the 2011 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash.
When was the Belarusian Cup founded?
The Belarusian Cup was founded in 2002 by the Belarusian Ice Hockey Federation as the nation's premier domestic knockout competition, with Keramin Minsk winning the inaugural edition.
How does the Belarusian Cup format work?
The tournament begins with a group stage where 12 teams are divided into two groups of six, playing round-robin matches. The top teams from each group advance to single-elimination semifinals and finals, with aggregate scoring determining progression across two-leg ties.
Does the Belarusian Cup have playoff matches?
Yes, after the group stage, the tournament transitions to single-elimination playoffs featuring semifinals and a final, typically played on a home-and-away basis with aggregate scoring determining the winner.
API data: 15 May 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026