Swedish Hockey League | 11/14 18:00 | - | Timra IK vs HV71 | - | View | |
Swedish Hockey League | 11/16 17:00 | - | Skelleftea AIK vs HV71 | - | View | |
Swedish Hockey League | 11/18 18:00 | - | Luleå Hockey vs HV71 | - | View | |
Swedish Hockey League | 11/21 18:00 | - | HV71 vs Brynas IF | - | View | |
Swedish Hockey League | 11/23 14:15 | - | Farjestad BK vs HV71 | - | View | |
Swedish Hockey League | 11/26 18:00 | - | HV71 vs Orebro HK | - | View |
Swedish Hockey League | 11/02 17:00 | - | [13] HV71 v Vaxjo Lakers HC [7] | L | 3-5 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/31 18:00 | - | [13] HV71 v Leksands IF [9] | W | 5-4 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/26 16:00 | - | [13] HV71 v Lulea HF [5] | L | 2-3 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/24 17:00 | - | [5] Brynas IF v HV71 [13] | L | 4-3 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/19 13:15 | - | [12] HV71 v Timra IK [5] | L | 2-3 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/17 17:00 | - | [11] Leksands IF v HV71 [12] | W | 2-5 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/12 13:15 | - | [12] HV71 v Rogle BK [14] | L | 3-4 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/10 17:00 | - | [7] IF Malmo Redhawks v HV71 [11] | L | 4-2 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/05 13:15 | - | [14] HV71 v Farjestad BK [1] | W | 6-3 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/03 17:00 | - | [7] Orebro HK v HV71 [14] | L | 5-3 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 10/01 17:00 | - | [14] HV71 v Modo Hockey [8] | W | 2-0 | |
Swedish Hockey League | 09/28 16:00 | - | [8] Linkoping HC v HV71 [14] | L | 2-1 |
HV71 (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈhôːveː ˌɧɵtːɪˈɛtː]), often referred to as just HV, is a Swedish professional ice hockey club based in Jönköping, playing in the Swedish Hockey League (SHL), the first tier of Swedish ice hockey. The team played in the 2008–09 Champions Hockey League season, and also participated in the new Champions Hockey League tournament since the 2014–15 season. Between 2008 and 2013, HV also participated in the European Trophy tournament. With the exception of a one-year stint in the 2021–22 season in Sweden's second tier, HockeyAllsvenskan, where they won the promotion playoffs, the club has played continuously in the SHL since 1985.
This article needs to be updated.(April 2021) |
HV71 was founded on May 24, 1971, as a merger between Husqvarna IF and Vätterstads IK, and took the name Huskvarna/Vätterstads IF but later that year it was shortened to the current name HV71. The club first entered the top Swedish league, Elitserien, in 1979, but was soon relegated. They won promotion again in 1984–85 and have remained in the top division ever since with the exception of the 2021-22 season, and are as of the 2000s a well-established top club in Sweden. The club has won the national championship five times; 1995, 2004, 2008, 2010 and 2017. For a few years in the late 1990s, HV71 was also called the Blue Bulls.
Many Swedes associate HV71 with the club's old arena Rosenlundshallen, which was inaugurated in 1958 as Sweden's first indoor ice hockey arena, but was replaced in 2000 with the new and improved Kinnarps Arena. As the new arena was built around and on top of Rosenlundshallen, HV71 practically played its games during the season 1999–00 in a construction site.
On December 6, 2006, HV71 topped Elitserien after a 5-2-win over Färjestads BK, at the same time as the club's two youth teams (under 20 and 18 years old) topped their leagues, J20 SuperElit and J18 Elit. This was an event that had never happened before in HV71's entire club history.
HV71 won its first national championship season 1994–95 as the last (8th) team to qualify for the playoffs. The club is the only team in Swedish history to win the finals after ending as the 8th team at the end of the regular season. In the quarter-finals HV beat Djurgårdens IF Hockey, the team that finished first in the regular season, in three straight games. In the semifinal they came back after having lost the first two games to Malmö Redhawks, the team which was then defending champions, and turned the series around to a 3–2 victory. Finally they managed a decisive sudden death victory in the final against Brynäs IF in the fourth period of the fifth game to win the championship. The name of the historical scorer was Johan Lindbom, but other big heroes during the play-offs were the goalie Boo Ahl and the Finnish center-forward Esa Keskinen.
The second championship was won during the season 2003–04 after beating Modo Hockey with a 4–2-game series, Frölunda HC with 4–2 in games in the semi-finals, and then winning the finals with a 4-3 match series against Färjestads BK. In the quarter-finals HV71 set a new Swedish record for scoring the most goals in one period with seven in the first period of the second game against Modo Hockey. In fact they scored the seven goals during the last ten minutes of the period. The game ended with a 10–1 victory. In the final, goalie Stefan Liv managed to keep his goal empty in all four games that the team won, the two last games ending 1-0 and 5-0 respectively. He also kept the goal empty in the last semi-final, which means he managed this for five consecutive wins.
HV71 ended the regular season as the second placed team after Färjestads BK. HV chose to meet Brynäs IF in the quarter-finals and managed after seven games (4 wins and 3 losses) to continue to the semifinals. The team faced Modo Hockey and even with home advantage HV did not manage to proceed to the finals having lost four out of seven games. This meant that HV for the second consecutive year lost a seven games series in the semifinal to the eventual Swedish champion.
During the season the newly acquired defenceman Johan Åkerman was a trendsetting player and also made his national debut for Sweden at the age of 34. HV's starting goaltender, Erik Ersberg, had his breakthrough and played for the national team; and was awarded with the Honken Trophy as Sweden's best goaltender. During the off-season he signed with the NHL team Los Angeles Kings.