Leksands IF (women)

SDHL ice hockey team in Leksand, Sweden From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leksands Idrottsförening, abbreviated Leksands IF or LIF, is a semi-professional ice hockey team in the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL). They play in Leksand, a town in the western-central Swedish province of Dalarna, at Tegera Arena. Until 2021, the organisation ran a second women's side, called Leksands IF Dam 2, which competed in the Damettan Västra.

CityLeksand, Sweden
LeagueSDHL
Founded1998 (1998)
Home arenaTegera Arena
Quick facts City, League ...
Leksands IF
CityLeksand, Sweden
LeagueSDHL
Founded1998 (1998)
Home arenaTegera Arena
ColoursBlue, white, yellow
     
General managerAlexander Bröms
Head coachJoakim Engström
CaptainCourtney Vorster
Parent clubLeksands IF
Websiteleksandsif.se
Current season
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History

The women's section of Leksands IF was founded in 1998.[1] The 2008 season saw a leap in success for the club, as it earned promotion to the Riksserien, and saw Cecilia Östberg and Klara Myrén become the first two Leksands players to represent the Swedish national women's team. In 2012, the club finished in 7th place, and was forced to compete in the relegation playoffs, but managed to keep its place in the SDHL.

In 2016, the club hired former Leksands men's youth player Alexander Bröms as head coach for the women's side, despite him having no previous coaching experience.[2] He would hold the role until his departure in 2018 to coach the women's national under-18 team.

In 2017, multiple Leksands players publicly voiced dissatisfaction at the way the organisation was treating the women's side, including the fact that women's players received no salary and were being forced to clean up the arena's stands after men's games.[3][4] Despite club chairperson Åke Nordström promising to improve conditions, after six months the players had only been provided with some exercise gear and a team-branded training bag.[5]

In April 2018, Leksands goaltender Leon Reuterström publicly came out as transgender, and retired from the SDHL to pursue his medical transition.[6] Later that summer, long-time club forward and third-leading scorer in club history, Iveta Koka, left the club to sign with AIK IF. Despite losing Koka, the club made several big signings ahead of the 2018–19 season, including Swedish international Anna Borgqvist and Canadian Danielle Stone. After beginning the season with a 9–0 victory over SDE Hockey, Leksands finished in 4th place in the SDHL, the second best result in club history.[7][8] The club still failed to make it past the playoff quarterfinals, however, and both Borgqvist and Stone left the club after just one year. Long time defender and second-highest all-time in games played for the club Sofia Engström left the Leksands that summer as well, after the club had gone months without offering any players (nor the head coach) a contract extension following the team's elimination in the playoffs.[9] The club dropped to 8th place in the 2019–20 SDHL season.[10]

Season-by-season results

This is a partial list of the most recent seasons completed by Leksands. Code explanation; GP—Games played, W—Wins, L—Losses, T—Tied games, GF—Goals for, GA—Goals against, Pts—Points. Top Scorer: Points (Goals+Assists)

More information Season, League ...
Season League Regular season Post season results
FinishGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPtsTop scorer
2015-16 Riksserien 5th 361834111158064 Latvia I. Koka 40 (10+30) Lost quarterfinals against Djurgården
2016-17 SDHL 7th 361181169210350 Latvia I. Koka 38 (21+17) Lost quarterfinals against Djurgården
2017-18 SDHL 6th 361314188810045 Sweden W. Johansson 28 (12+16) Lost quarterfinals against MODO
2018-19 SDHL 4th 362110141117465 Sweden A. Borgqvist 32 (7+25) Lost quarterfinals against HV71
2019-20 SDHL 8th 361033209113339 Sweden K. Armborg 30 (9+21) Lost quarterfinals against HV71
2020-21 SDHL 9th 36521285214820 Sweden W. Johansson 16 (5+11) Relegation series cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021-22 SDHL 8th 361211227010439 Czech Republic T. Vanišová 24 (15+9) Lost quarterfinals against Brynäs
2022-23 SDHL 6th 3292615608937 Czech Republic H. Haasová 14 (12+2) Lost quarterfinals against Djurgården
2023-24 SDHL 8th 36110718769540 United States S. Maloney 20 (9+11) Lost quarterfinals against Luleå
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Players and personnel

2024–25 roster

As of 12 January 2025[11][12][13]
More information No., Nat ...
No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
16 Sweden Matilda af Bjur (A) C L 26 2022 Linköping, Östergötland, Sweden
7 Iceland Sunna Björgvinsdóttir RW L 25 2024 Akureyri, Norðurland eystra, Iceland
25 Sweden Nathalie Carlsson Mattila D R 24 2023 Gothenburg, Västergötland, Sweden
19 Canada Lillian George RW R 25 2024 Nipissing, Ontario, Canada
28 Sweden Linnea Horn F L 20 2024 Stockholm, Uppland, Sweden
21 Norway Emile Kruse Johansen (A) LW L 26 2023 Halden, Østlandet, Norway
87 Sweden Ellen Jonsson G L 27 2023 Söderhamn, Hälsingland, Sweden
13 Sweden Ella Lindmark F R 21 2024 Boden, Norrbotten, Sweden
5 Sweden Hilda Ljungberg D/C L 20 2024 Västerås, Västmanland, Sweden
8 Sweden Karolin Malmquist C L 25 2024 Kil, Värmland, Sweden
27 United States Shay Maloney F R 26 2023 McHenry, Illinois, United States
26 Sweden Vilma Nilsson C L 24 2024 Umeå, Västerbotten, Sweden
35 United States Emma Polusny G L 26 2022 Mound, Minnesota, United States
15 Sweden Ida Press D L 26 2023 Uppsala, Uppland, Sweden
77 Czech Republic Tereza Radová D L 24 2022 Svitavy, Pardubický kraj, Czechia
22 Czech Republic Agáta Sarnovská LW L 24 2023 Litoměřice, Ústecký kraj, Czechia
12 Sweden Sofia Sohlin RW L 21 2024
24 Sweden Wilma Tagesson D L 18 2024 Örebro, Närke, Sweden
18 Sweden Saga Tynell Nissas C L 26 2023
23 Sweden Alva Ullbors D L 19 2022 Mora, Dalarna, Sweden
29 Canada Courtney Vorster (C) D R 25 2023 Richmond, British Columbia, Canada
10 Finland Kiira Yrjänen F L 24 2024 Riihimäki, Kanta-Häme, Finland
44 Sweden Wilda Öhman D L 21 2024 Luleå, Norrbotten, Sweden
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Coaching staff and team personnel

  • Head coach: Joakim Engström
  • Assistant coach: Göran Tärnlund
  • Goaltending coach: Filip Myrskog
  • Conditioning coach: Karin Reichel
  • Equipment managers: Kent Arvidsson

Team captaincy history

Head coaches

  • Daniel Ljung, 2007–08
  • Ulf Hedberg, 2008–2011
  • Magnus Svensson, 2011–12
  • Christer Siik, 2012–2014
  • Jens Nielsen, 2014–15
  • Christer Sjöberg, 2015–16
  • Alexander Bröms, 2016–2018
  • Ulf Hedberg, 2018–19
  • Lars Stanmark, 2019–2021
  • Mathias Olsson, 2021–22
  • Jordan Colliton, 5 May 2022[14]  22 November 2023[15]
  • Joakim Engström, 22 November 2023[16] 

Franchise records and leaders

All-time scoring leaders

The top-ten regular season point-scorers (goals + assists) of Leksands IF through the 2023–24 season.[17]

Note: Nat = Nationality; Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game;   = 2024–25 Leksands player

More information Nat, Player ...
All-Time Points
Nat PlayerPos GPGAPtsP/G
Sweden Cecilia ÖstbergLW 152861172031.34
Sweden Hanna LindqvistLW/C 317801021820.57
Latvia Iveta KokaLW 17681981791.02
Sweden Wilma JohanssonC/RW 27863831460.53
Sweden Sofia EngströmD 33043861290.39
Sweden Hanna SköldF 23865591240.52
Sweden Madeleine HallC 20651591100.53
Sweden Lina WesterC 15357471040.68
Sweden Anna BorgqvistC/LW 9738631011.04
Sweden Kajsa ArmborgC 2083355880.42
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References

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