Room 7 – Eduard Novák
Room 7 - Eduard Novák
DESCRIPTION OF THE ROOM
Room of Eduard Novák is a triple room with shower, hairdryer, minibar, TV with remote control and colorful beanbags for comfortable seating. This room is decorated in pastel colors that correspond with the hotel logo. The room overlooks a water park.
Room of Eduard Novák
Eduard Novák
hockey forward, Kladno former player, Kladno hockey legend, winner of the silver and bronze Olympic medals, two-times World Champion, five-time National Champion, Team Champion of Europe, the Czech Hockey Hall of Famer, member of the League Scorers Club.
A native of Buštěhrad near Kladno; SONP Kladno former player for which he started playing in the youth team; after a short time in the A-team, he joined Dukla Písek and Dukla Košice dirong his military service, then he returned to Kladno in 1967 playing 506 games – this excellent player with the famous hard shot and one who literally lived for Kladno scored 292 goals.
He was a member of Kladno best offensive formation of E. Novák-Nový-Bauer, supported by the defense of equally outstanding pair Pospíšil-Kaberle; he won five league titles and victory in the European Cup, with Kladno defeating Spartak Moscow in the final, during the most famous period of Kladno. during the famous period of Kladno; his excellent league results while wearing the blue and white jersey is supplemented with two third places; he participated in Kladno’s famous tour to the USA and Canada at the turn of 1977 and 1978 playing four successful games with the teams of the NHL and WHA.
Together with F. Kaberle, he played and trained Japanese team Furukawa Denko in Nikko in 1982, where he once more returned to coach by himself in 1984; besides Kladno, he played for Klagenfurt, Austria, the former Gottwald and for Duisburg, Germany. He coached Kladno, Gottwaldov, Plzeň, Zlín; he had proven his outstanding productivity as a member of the national team, too, scoring 48 goals in 113 games.
He brought back home the bronze and silver from the Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan and Innsbruck, Austria; he brought our team closer to a dreamed-of Olympic triumph by scoring just under nine minutes left before the end of the game in Innsbruck in a match with the former Soviet ‘machine’, however, an absurd penalty by a begrudging referee helped the Soviet team to change the outcome; he won two titles at the World Championships in Katowice 1976 and Vienna 1977.