Mora IK
Mora IK | |
---|---|
File:MoraIK.png | |
City | Mora |
League | HockeyAllsvenskan |
Founded | 1935 |
Home arena | Smidjegrav Arena |
Colours | Red, white, green |
General manager | Peter Hermodsson |
Head coach | Mats Lusth |
Captain | Adam Masuhr |
Website | www |
Mora IK (or Mora Ishockeyklubb) is a Swedish professional ice hockey club from Mora in northern Dalarna. After failing the 2019 SHL qualifiers, Mora has been relegated for play in the second-tier league, HockeyAllsvenskan, in the 2019–20 season. Mora has previously played 25 seasons in the top tier, including four seasons in Elitserien, as the SHL was called at the time). The team has reached the finals of the Swedish Championships only once, in 1950, a match which they lost 7–2 to Djurgårdens IF. Mora has played in the top two tiers of Swedish hockey since the 1944–45 season.
History
Mora IK was founded in 1935. In 1945, the club reached the top tier of ice hockey in Sweden for the first time, and participated in their first (and to date only) Swedish Championship final in 1950. Mora yo-yoed in and out of the top league, Division 1, until 1966, when they managed to maintain a spot in Division 1 for nine consecutive seasons, which remains Mora's longest run in Sweden's top hockey league. In 1975, Elitserien was founded as a new top-tier hockey league, and Mora failed to qualify for this new league. They would continue play in Division 1 in its new function as Sweden's second-tier league, for 29 years, until 2004 when they managed promotion to Elitserien for the first time.
The club took advantage of the 2004–05 NHL lockout to sign several NHL players, including Shawn Horcoff, Daniel Cleary and brothers Marian Hossa and Marcel Hossa. They finished 9th that season, a respectable position for a newly promoted team. Mora finished 8th in both the 2005–06 and 2006–06 seasons, and accordingly participated in the Swedish Championship playoffs for the first time since 1970, but were eliminated in the quarterfinals each time. The 2007–08 Elitserien season resulted with Mora in 11th place, forcing them to play in the 2008 Elitserien qualifier (Kvalserien) to retain their spot in Elitserien. They finished 4th in that tournament, resulting in relegation back to HockeyAllsvenskan.
During the 2012–13 NHL lockout, Bobby Ryan of the Anaheim Ducks and Anze Kopitar of the Stanley Cup-winning Los Angeles Kings joined the team to play with his brother, Gašper, for the duration of the lockout. This period in the second tier came to an end after nine years when Mora defeated local rivals Leksands IF 4–2 in games in the 2017 SHL qualifiers, taking their spot in the top flight.[1] Their rivalries are commonly referred to as Siljansderbyt (English: the Siljan derby). The team would once again face Leksand in the 2019 SHL qualifiers, after finishing 13th in the regular season, where they lost 4–1 in games to Leksand and thus were relegated to HockeyAllsvenskan while Leksand took their SHL spot for the next season.
Seasons-by-season
For the full season-by-season history, see List of Mora IK seasons
Year | Level | League | Record | Avg. home atnd. |
Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Position | W–OT–L | ||||||
2012–13 | Tier 2 | HockeyAllsvenskan | 8th | 20–7–2–23 | 3,099 | ||
2013–14 | Tier 2 | HockeyAllsvenskan | 6th | 19–9–5–19 | 2,658 | [2] | |
Playoff to SHL qualifier | 4th | 1–0–1–4 | 1,740 | [3] | |||
2014–15 | Tier 2 | HockeyAllsvenskan | 7th | 22–3–7–20 | 2,710 | ||
HockeyAllsvenskan playoffs | 5th | 1–0–3–1 | 2,540 | ||||
2015–16 | Tier 2 | HockeyAllsvenskan | 6th | 20–6–6–20 | 2,924 | [1] | |
HockeyAllsvenskan playoffs | 2nd | 3–1–0–1 | 3,018 | [2] | |||
2016–17 | Tier 2 | HockeyAllsvenskan | 1st | 31–4–4–13 | 3,062 | [3] | |
HockeyAllsvenskan finals | — | 3–0–0–0 | 4,050 | Won 3–0 in games vs BIK Karlskoga | [4] | ||
SHL qualifiers | - | 4–0–0–2 | 4,500 | Won 4–2 in games vs Leksands IF Promoted to the SHL |
[5] | ||
2017–18 | Tier 1 | SHL | 13th | 13–5–2–32 | [6] | ||
SHL qualifiers | 4–0–0–1 | 4,500 | Won 4–1 in games vs Leksands IF, Saved in relegation to the SHL |
Current roster
Updated 9 March, 2023.[4]
No. | Nat | Player | Pos | S/G | Age | Acquired | Birthplace |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
22 | Måns Carlsson (A) | C | L | 27 | 2019 | Stockholm, Sweden | |
39 | Kristoffer Gunnarsson (A) | D | L | 27 | 2019 | Borås, Sweden | |
26 | Isac Heens | D | L | 25 | 2020 | Stockholm, Sweden | |
4 | Johannes Johannesen | D | R | 27 | 2022 | Stavanger, Norway | |
45 | Andreas Ljunggren | G | L | 29 | 2021 | Stockholm, Sweden | |
90 | Daniel Ljunggren (C) | C | L | 30 | 2019 | Stockholm, Sweden | |
7 | Ludvig Markman | D | L | 20 | 2022 | Linköping, Sweden | |
71 | Alexander Molldén | D | R | 29 | 2022 | Kristianstad, Sweden | |
28 | Jonathan Myrenberg | D | R | 21 | 2022 | Täby, Sweden | |
30 | Kari Piiroinen | G | L | 23 | 2022 | Helsinki, Finland | |
33 | Olle Strandell | D | L | 25 | 2021 | Leksand, Sweden | |
6 | Oskar Tängerby | D | R | 20 | 2022 | Falun, Sweden |
Retired numbers
- Number 14 is retired in honor of Mats ¨Tuppen¨ Lönn, a forward who played for the club 1956–1974.
- Number 17 is retired in honor of Hans Hansson, a centre who played for the club 1967–1984.[5][6][7]
- Number 24 is retired in honor of Bengt Åkerblom, a defenceman who played for the club 1990–1995.
- Number 78 is retired in honor of Mikael Simons, a right winger who played for the club 1994–2001 and 2002-2010.
See also
References
- ^ "Mora till SHL – slår ut rivalen Leksand". Aftonbladet. 1 April 2017.
- ^ "HockeyAllsvenskan: 2013–14: HockeyAllsvenskan". Swedish Ice Hockey Association.
- ^ "HockeyAllsvenskan: 2013–14: PlayOff-Serien". Swedish Ice Hockey Association.
- ^ "Mora IK roster" (in Swedish). Mora IK. 2023-03-09. Retrieved 2023-03-09.
- ^ "Hasse hade allt" (in Swedish). Mora IK. 2007-11-25. Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2008-04-16.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Mora IK Klubbfakta" (in Swedish). Elitserien. Archived from the original on 2007-10-04. Retrieved 2008-04-16.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Hans Hansson - player profile and career stats". EuroHockey.net. Retrieved 2008-04-16.