HIFK Hockey
HIFK | |
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City | Helsinki |
League | SM-liiga |
Founded | 1897 |
Home arena | Helsingin jäähalli (capacity: 8,200) |
Colours | Red, white, dark blue |
Owner(s) | HIFK Ligaföreningen rf. |
General manager | Jukka Valtanen |
Head coach | Ville Peltonen |
Captain | Jori Lehterä |
Parent club(s) | HIFK |
Farm club(s) | Jokipojat |
Website | hifk |
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Championships | |
Playoff championships | 1969, 1970, 1974, 1980, 1983, 1998, 2011 |
Active departments of HIFK | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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HIFK (a traditional abbreviation of the Swedish name Idrottsföreningen Kamraterna, Helsingfors, English: "Sporting Society Comrades, Helsinki") is a professional ice hockey team based in Helsinki, Finland that plays in the SM-liiga, the sport's top-level league in Finland. The team plays at Helsinki Ice Hall.
History
[edit]IFK Helsingfors was founded in 1897 and started participating in ice hockey in 1928. Since then, HIFK has won the Finnish national championship seven times, of which three (1969, 1970, 1974) were in SM-sarja and four (1980, 1983, 1998, 2011) were in the SM-liiga. HIFK has the highest number of audience in the SM-liiga and is one of the wealthiest sports clubs in Finland.[citation needed]
One of the major influences to HIFK was the NHL veteran and Stanley Cup winner Carl Brewer. Hired in 1968 as a playing coach, he advocated a North American style of play which has persisted in HIFK since. Brewer's influence on the way ice hockey is played in Finland led to his posthumous induction to the Finnish Hockey Hall of Fame in 2003.
The championship team from 1998 is widely recognized as one of the best ever to have skated together in the top flight of Finnish ice hockey.[citation needed] Players on the 1998 championship team included a number of future (and former) NHL players – including Tim Thomas, Jan Čaloun, Johan Davidsson, Bob Halkidis, Olli Jokinen, Jere Karalahti, Jarno Kultanen, Brian Rafalski, Christian Ruuttu, Jarkko Ruutu, Kimmo Timonen and Marko Tuomainen.
HIFK's general manager starting from May 1, 2008, is Jukka Valtanen. He is the successor of Pentti Matikainen, who coached Team Finland to its first hockey Olympic medal (silver) in Calgary 1988.
Team identity
[edit]Logos and jerseys
[edit]HIFK uses a shield for their logo, with a four pointed star and text I.F.K. and year of formation 1897 on it. They wear red, white and blue colored jerseys, and have worn those colors since their beginnings. For the 1993-94 season, HIFK changed their logo to a five pointed star with text saying HIFK Hockey on it. Unpopular with fans, and HIFK wanting to modernize their brand, changed their logo again in 1996 to a red big cat on a blue circle. Commonly referred to as "petologo" (English: "beast logo") among fans. When the beast logo became HIFK's primary logo for the 1996-97 season, they reintroduced the original shield logo to become their jersey's new shoulder patches. For the 2008-09 season, HIFK made their original shield logo the primary logo once again. It would swap places with the beast logo on the jerseys, making the beast logo their new shoulder patches until 2017, when the beast logo was eliminated from the jerseys entirely.
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HIFK's shield logo, used as their primary logo in 1928-1993, 2008-present; a well as their secondary logo in 1996-2008.
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HIFK's star logo, used as their primary logo in 1993-1996.
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The four-pointed star is the earliest emblem of IFK clubs (Idrottsföreningen Kamraterna).
Home arena
[edit]![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/15/Talviklassikko_2011.jpg/220px-Talviklassikko_2011.jpg)
HIFK play their home games at Helsinki Ice Hall. The stadium opened in 1966, and seats up to 8 200 spectators. The arena was also used and shared by rival team Jokerit until 1997, when they moved to the Hartwall Arena. HIFK is well known for playing classic hard rock music during games in Helsinki Ice Hall.
- Goal song: "Flamethrower" by The J. Geils Band.
- Opening songs: "Hail To The King" by Avenged Sevenfold, "Ghost Riders" by Steve Hunter, and "Whatever You Want" by Status Quo.
- Penalty songs: "Who Are You" by The Who when the visiting team takes a penalty. "Bad To The Bone" by George Thorogood when the home team takes a penalty.
- Other noteworthy songs: "Let's Play Hockey" by Bill Misener, "Red White & Blue" by Lynyrd Skynyrd, "Go IFK" by Jake & Co.
Rivalries
[edit]HIFK are rivals with Jokerit; games were often sold out and were in the later years among the fiercest in Nordic ice hockey, but are no longer played following Jokerit's withdrawal from Liiga after the 2013–14 season to join the Russian-based Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). Following a history of even series of games, HIFK won the game total with 106–105 after a 2–1 victory in a classical outdoor game in March 2014, claiming the title of Helsinki's dominion.[1]
Honors
[edit]![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/67/HIFK_image2.png/220px-HIFK_image2.png)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f0/Timo_Sutinen_Jokerit_1971.jpg/220px-Timo_Sutinen_Jokerit_1971.jpg)
SM-sarja
[edit]SM-sarja Kanada-malja: 1969, 1970, 1974
SM-sarja Kanada-malja: 1973, 1975
SM-sarja Kanada-malja: 1955, 1959, 1971, 1972
SM-liiga
[edit]SM-liiga Kanada-malja: 1980, 1983, 1998, 2011
SM-liiga Kanada-malja: 1986, 1999, 2016
SM-liiga Kanada-malja: 1982, 1987, 1988, 1992, 2004, 2018, 2021
International
[edit]Ahearne Cup (1): 1970
Tampere Cup (2): 1994, 2015
IIHF European Cup (1): 1980–81
Nordic Trophy (1): 2008
Other awards for the club:
- Harry Lindblad trophy (SM-Liiga regular season winner, since 1975): 2016
Players
[edit]Current roster
[edit]Updated 22 September 2024[2]
Honored members
[edit]- 1 Stig Wetzell, 1972–83
- 5 Heikki Riihiranta, 1967–83
- 7 Simo Saarinen, 1980–96
- 9 Kimmo Kuhta, 1996–2013
- 17 Matti Murto, 1964–83
- 20 Matti Hagman, 1972–92
- 22 Mika Kortelainen, 1987–2002
- 23 Pertti Lehtonen, 1976–98
- 35 Sakari Lindfors, 1985–2002
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/15/HIFK-players-1971.jpg/180px-HIFK-players-1971.jpg)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a4/Ville_Peltonen_2.jpg/180px-Ville_Peltonen_2.jpg)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5d/Kimmo_Kuhta_of_HIFK_-_20110418.jpg/180px-Kimmo_Kuhta_of_HIFK_-_20110418.jpg)
NHL alumni
[edit]![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/74/HIFK_image3.png/220px-HIFK_image3.png)
Peter Ahola
Tom Askey
Keith Aulie
Yohann Auvitu
Jamie Baker
Shawn Bates
Jaroslav Bednar
Emil Bemström
Ladislav Benýšek
Sean Bergenheim
Tim Bergland
Tom Bissett
Henrik Borgström
Luciano Borsato
Darren Boyko
Kip Brennan
Carl Brewer
Alex Broadhurst
Niklas Bäckström
Jan Čaloun
Sébastien Centomo
Dale Clarke
Johan Davidsson
Tom Draper
Parris Duffus
Corey Elkins
Miika Elomo
Rico Fata
Joe Finley
Trevor Gillies
Raymond Giroux
Nikolai Goldobin
Markus Granlund
Mikael Granlund
Steve Guolla
Matti Hagman
Niklas Hagman
Bob Halkidis
Jeff Hamilton
Brett Harkins
Ilkka Heikkinen
Miro Heiskanen
Roope Hintz
Jan Hrdina
Ville Husso
Hannes Hyvönen
Kari Jalonen
Mikko Jokela
Olli Jokinen
Martti Järventie
Iiro Järvi
Jari Kaarela
Sami Kapanen
Jere Karalahti
Michael Keränen
Otto Koivula
Jarno Kultanen
Teemu Laakso
Kevin Lankinen
Lucas Lessio
Joona Luoto
Ross Lupaschuk
Toni Lydman
John Madden
Ivan Majesky
Anssi Melametsä
Sandy Moger
Johan Motin
Cory Murphy
Raymond Murray
Todd Nelson
Mika Noronen
Patrick O'Sullivan
Joni Ortio
Iiro Pakarinen
Ville Peltonen
Joël Perrault
Mathieu Perreault
Janne Pesonen
Lennart Petrell
Ilkka Pikkarainen
Lasse Pirjetä
Andrej Podkonicky
Timo Pärssinen
Kyle Quincey
Brian Rafalski
Joonas Rask
Pekka Rautakallio
Christian Ruuttu
Tuomo Ruutu
Jarkko Ruutu
Simo Saarinen
Tony Salmelainen
Tommi Santala
Ryan Savoia
Robert Schnabel
Roman Simicek
Ilkka Sinisalo
Ville Sirén
Martin Spanhel
Antti Suomela
Ryan Thang
Tim Thomas
Billy Tibbetts
Esa Tikkanen
Kimmo Timonen
Brad Thiessen
Marko Tuomainen
Ryan Vesce
Tomáš Vokoun
Roman Vopat
Peter White
Petteri Wirtanen
Marek Židlický
Other notable alumni
[edit]Dave Siciliano, player-coach during the 1971–72 season[3][4]
References
[edit]- ^ "HIFK vei ikuisen Stadin herruuden (in Finnish)". Ilta-Sanomat. 1 March 2014. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
- ^ https://hifk.fi/pelaajat/
- ^ "Dave Siciliano". Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame. Thunder Bay, Ontario. 1995. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
- ^ Turchansky, Ray (September 20, 1996). "From bantam to junior in single bound". Edmonton Journal. Edmonton, Alberta. p. 26.
External links
[edit]- Official website (in Finnish)