As early as 2014, Michkov began to get noticed for his ice hockey talent, setting scoring records for his age group.[1] He scored 109 points in 26 games in the Russian under-16 league, and then had 56 points in 56 games as a 16-year-old in the under-20 division, besting the previous record for points, held by Nikita Kucherov.[2]
In 2020, Michkov transferred from the youth program of Lokomotiv Yaroslavl to SKA Saint Petersburg.[3] He played the 2020–21 season with both SKA-1946 and SKA Varyagi of the Youth Hockey League (MHL), recording 56 points in 56 games.[4] He led the league in goals scored with 38, and finished eighth overall in points.[5] He also set a new record for points by a 16-year-old in the MHL[6]
Professional
In 2021, Michkov made his professional debut with SKA Saint Petersburg of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL), with his first game coming on 2 September 2021.[7] He split the season with SKA and their junior affiliates; he had five points in 13 games in the KHL, and a further 51 points in 28 games with SKA-1946 and SKA Varyagi in the MHL.[8]
During the 2020–21 season, he signed a five-year contract with SKA Saint Petersburg that would have kept him playing in Russia until the 2025–26 season.[9]
SKA loaned Michkov to HC Sochi on 20 December 2022, for the rest of the 2022–23 season. At the time Michkov had played three games with SKA and had not recorded a point. He also played 14 games in the VHL with SKA-Neva, recording 14 points.[14] Though HC Sochi finished with the worst record in the KHL, Michkov finished fourth in team scoring with 20 points in 27 games; his point-per-game average of .67 was the highest for a draft-eligible player in KHL history.[15]
At the 2023 NHL entry draft, Michkov was selected with the seventh overall pick by the Philadelphia Flyers. Continuing his development in Russia, Michkov returned to SKA for the commencement of the 2023–24 season. Beginning the season as a healthy scratch, Michkov featured in just one game with SKA, before he was returned to Sochi on loan for the remainder of the season on 12 September 2023.[16] Less than four months after he was drafted, Yahoo! Sports questioned if teams had "missed the ball", finding it "hard to reconcile Michkov slipping to seventh"; Michkov scored 14 points in 14 games and was voted into the KHL All-Star Game.[17] He completed the season with Sochi collecting a team leading 19 goals, while placing second in scoring with 41 points through 47 regular season games.
Philadelphia Flyers
On 1 July 2024, Michkov signed a three-year, entry-level contract with the Philadelphia Flyers.[18] Flyers general manager Daniel Brière speculated part of the reason Michkov fell in the draft was due to his KHL contract keeping him in Russia until 2026, and expressed amazement he was able to join the team earlier than expected.[19] Qualifying for the team out of training camp, Michkov recorded his first NHL point against the Calgary Flames on 12 October, in a 6–3 loss; he assisted on a goal by Travis Konecny.[20] His first two NHL goals came on 15 October, in a 4–3 overtime loss to the Edmonton Oilers, both scored on the power play.[21] Michkov was named NHL's rookie of the month after he recorded four goals and five assists for nine points in 11 games played during October.[22] On 30 November, against the St. Louis Blues, Michkov became the fourth teenager in NHL history to record 3 overtime goals, joining Sidney Crosby, Ilya Kovalchuk and Rick Nash as the only players to accomplish the feat.
Michkov scored a hat trick playing for the Russia under-18 team against Germany in the 2021 World U18 Championships.[23] He was named the most valuable of the tournament at 16 years old, and also won the scoring race with 12 goals, the most goals ever scored by a Russian and the second-highest single-tournament total in history, and 16 points. Michkov was also named best forward and made the media all-star team.[24] Russia earned the silver medal.[25]
Personal life
Michkov was born in Perm, and has played ice hockey since receiving his first pair of skates at age 3.[7] In order to further develop his ice hockey career, he, along with his parents and brother, moved to Yaroslavl to join the youth program of Lokomotiv Yaroslavl in 2015.[1]
In April 2023, Michkov's father, Andrei, was reported missing; he was found dead two days later near Sochi.[26]
^"Матвей Мичков будет играть за "Сочи"" [Matvei Michkov will play for "Sochi"] (in Russian). HCSochi.ru. 20 December 2022. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 25 December 2022.