The ex-hockey player estimates that the risk of becoming a victim of physical violence is high in similar goofs.
PDO
KHL hockey player Aleksandr Khokhlachev30, has found himself in the middle of an uproar in his native Russia.
Several Russian media have published a dashboard video, based on which Khohlačov jumps completely unexpectedly onto the hood of a car of a person unknown to him and continues from there to the roof of the car.
According to the Championat sports news website, the video was shot over the weekend in the Russian Far Eastern city of Khabarovsk. Khohlachev’s club Amur Khabarovsk lost their home match against AK Bars Kazan over the weekend, and according to Russian media, the video was shot the night after the match.
Ex-hockey player Nikita Shchitov wondered at Khohlatsov’s talk.
– The person who walked over the car was probably under the influence of alcohol. A sane person would hardly do that. That’s the behavior of a redneck, you can’t behave like that. The owner of the car could be, for example, a boxer, in which case the man would get a kick out of it. There are examples of such cases, including in Khabarovsk, Shchitov said, according to Championat.
Shchitov pointed out that Russian hockey players earn well and should support their whole family financially for many years.
A well-known foul-mouthed puck personality in Russia Andrei Nazarov he also annoyed Khohlatsov.
– A player of Khohlatsov’s level shouldn’t have the strength to do that. An athlete of that level uses all his strength on the ice and goes home just to rest, Nazarov said.
– That was seeking attention. Aleksandr is trying to show that he is getting too little playing time or that he is being played with the wrong players.
Khohlachov moved to Khabarovsk this season from Spartak Moscow. Khohlačov tried to make a breakthrough in the NHL in the Boston Bruins organization from 2013 to 2016, but the number of NHL games remained at nine.
Khohlačov has played in the KHL since the 2016–17 season. This season, according to the Russian media, he earns 75 million rubles, or about 730,000 euros per year.