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In the early months of the 2000-01 season with the Ducks, Hävelid earned six of his ten assists for the year in a nine game span from October 16-30, 2000. This would include a career-best four game point streak. He would set yet another career high with two goals and four points against [[Columbus Blue Jackets|Columbus]] on December 13, 2000.
In the early months of the 2000-01 season with the Ducks, Hävelid earned six of his ten assists for the year in a nine game span from October 16-30, 2000. This would include a career-best four game point streak. He would set yet another career high with two goals and four points against [[Columbus Blue Jackets|Columbus]] on December 13, 2000.


January 2001 would bring yet another disappointing injury, a tear in the [[Anterior Cruciate Ligament]], or ACL, and a partial tear in the [[Medial collateral ligament]] as well, suffered during a game against the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]] on January 15, 2001. He would miss 35 games from the injury, however still retain his ranking as third on the club in Average Time On Ice of 21:51.
January 2001 would bring yet another disappointing injury, a tear in the [[Anterior Cruciate Ligament]], or ACL, and a partial tear in the [[Medial collateral ligament]], suffered during a game against the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]] on January 15, 2001. He would miss 35 games from the injury, however still retain his ranking as third on the club in Average Time On Ice of 21:51.


While the 2001-02 season would only generate one goal and two assists, the 2002-03 season would prove to be one to remember.
While the 2001-02 season would only generate one goal and two assists, the 2002-03 season would prove to be one to remember.


Among five Mighty Ducks to play in all 82 regular-season games, he would set career highs with 11 goals, 22 assists and 33 points with Anaheim. By the end of the regular season, he ranked third on club with career-best plus-five rating and ATOI of 22:29, higher than the 2001-02 season. He was second among Mighty Ducks blue liners in points, goals and assists, and shared the team lead and was third among NHL defensemen with a career-best five game-winning tallies.
He led the [[Anaheim Mighty Ducks]] to their first NHL Western Conference Championship and the

Hävelid began by collecting nine out of his 33 points (five goals, four assists) in a 14-game span from November 27-December 28, 2002, including a career-high two-game goal streak<ref name="ST02">December 19-22, 2002</ref> finalized with a career-best two goals against [[Phoenix Coyotes|Phoenix]] on December 22, 2002. The new year of 2003 was injury free, and brought a plus or even rating in 11 straight games from January 18 to February 12, and was plus-eight in that span. Within that time, he earned five assists in a five game stretch from January 22-February 4, including a three-game assist/point streak, during which Hävelid played his 200<sup>th</sup> NHL game at [[San Jose Sharks|San Jose]] on January 30, 2003. Two months later, he registered four points in a three-game span from March 19-22 (one goal, three assists).

The [[Anaheim Mighty Ducks| Ducks]] began the [[2002-03 NHL Season|Stanley Cup Playoffs]] with a sweep of the [[Detroit Red Wings]] in the first round. Moving to the Semifinals, Hävelid contributed in a hard fought series against the Dallas Stars on April 23, 2003, resulting in the 4<sup>th</sup> longest overtime game in NHL history (Game 1). The match lasted into five overtime periods with an overtime length of 80:43, with goals from fellow Ducks and future [[Atlanta Thrashers|Thrashers]] teammates [[Jason Krog]] and [[Steve Rucchin]], yet ended only when [[Petr Sykora]] scored the game winning goal for Anaheim to a final score of 4-3. The series would end in six games (4-2).

With a closely contested sweep of the [[Minnesota Wild]], he led the [[Anaheim Mighty Ducks]] to their first NHL Western Conference Championship and the [[Clarence S. Campbell Bowl]].

May 27, 2003 would bring Hävelid and the Mighty Ducks to the [[2003 Stanley Cup Finals|Stanley Cup Finals]] against the [[New Jersey Devils]], where he notched a final Playoffs result of four assists in 21 games, sharing second among the defensemen on his team. But the series would end in heartbreak for Anaheim as the Devils won Game 7, 3-0, the third shutout of the series.

The following [[2003-04 NHL Season|season]] would show even better rankings for Hävelid, as he earned 26 points in 79 games with the Ducks (six goals, 20 assists). He would lead the Mighty Ducks defensemen and rank eighth on the team in points, share first among Mighty Ducks defensemen in goals, and top the club's blue liners with career-best five power play goals and three game-winning tallies.

He would also finish second on the club ranking with 22:38 ATOI, just nine seconds per game over the previous season. On December 21, 2003, he took a career-high seven shots against the [[San Jose Sharks]] and registered a career-best four assists tying his career high with four points against [[Minnesota Wild|Minnesota]] on January 23, 2004 in a regular season rematch. He played his 300th NHL game at [[Phoenix Coyotes|Phoenix]] on March 16.




In the summer of 2004, he was traded to the Thrashers for defenseman [[Kurtis Foster]].
In the summer of 2004, he was traded to the Thrashers for defenseman [[Kurtis Foster]].

Revision as of 09:30, 22 February 2008

Niclas Hävelid
Born (1973-04-12) April 12, 1973 (age 51)
Stockholm, Sweden
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 200 lb (91 kg; 14 st 4 lb)
Position Defense
Shoots Left
NHL team
Former teams
Atlanta Thrashers
Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
NHL draft 83rd overall, 1999
Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
Playing career 1999–present

Niclas Hävelid (born April 12, 1973 in Stockholm, Sweden) is a professional ice hockey defenseman and Alternate Captain who currently plays for the Atlanta Thrashers of the National Hockey League. While born in Stockholm, he was raised in Enköping, roughly 78 km west of his birthplace.


Playing Career

Hävelid began his hockey career playing locally around his home of Enköping in League III of the SIHA. After two seasons with the Enköpings he played with the Arlanda Wings for the 1990-91 season. The following year, he moved to AIK, a team based in Solna, just north of Stockholm. Currently in the SIHA's second highest league, AIK had at the time of Hävelid's arrival won the Swedish championship seven times (1934, 1935, 1938, 1946, 1947, 1982, 1984) and had been runner-up six other times (1930, 1936, 1940, 1968, 1978, 1981).

He continued with AIK until the 1998-99 season when he went to the Malmö Redhawks.

Hävelid was drafted 83rd overall by the Anaheim Mighty Ducks in the 1999 NHL Entry Draft.

In 1999, he played in his first North American season, notching nine points (two goals, seven assists) in 50 games with Anaheim, making his NHL debut at Dallas on October 2, 1999. A month later, he recorded his first goal, assist and multiple-point game in the NHL in one night against the Blackhawks and legendary goaltender Jocelyn Thibault on November 19th. In December, he would continue to post four (one goal, three assists) out of nine points for the season in a nine game span from December 12-29, 1999. The new year would not begin as well. With a broken finger, Hävelid would miss 22 games, from January 15-March 8, 2000. His lone two game minor league stint for post injury conditioning would be with the Cincinnati Mighty Ducks. He was scoreless in both games.

In the early months of the 2000-01 season with the Ducks, Hävelid earned six of his ten assists for the year in a nine game span from October 16-30, 2000. This would include a career-best four game point streak. He would set yet another career high with two goals and four points against Columbus on December 13, 2000.

January 2001 would bring yet another disappointing injury, a tear in the Anterior Cruciate Ligament, or ACL, and a partial tear in the Medial collateral ligament, suffered during a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins on January 15, 2001. He would miss 35 games from the injury, however still retain his ranking as third on the club in Average Time On Ice of 21:51.

While the 2001-02 season would only generate one goal and two assists, the 2002-03 season would prove to be one to remember.

Among five Mighty Ducks to play in all 82 regular-season games, he would set career highs with 11 goals, 22 assists and 33 points with Anaheim. By the end of the regular season, he ranked third on club with career-best plus-five rating and ATOI of 22:29, higher than the 2001-02 season. He was second among Mighty Ducks blue liners in points, goals and assists, and shared the team lead and was third among NHL defensemen with a career-best five game-winning tallies.

Hävelid began by collecting nine out of his 33 points (five goals, four assists) in a 14-game span from November 27-December 28, 2002, including a career-high two-game goal streak[1] finalized with a career-best two goals against Phoenix on December 22, 2002. The new year of 2003 was injury free, and brought a plus or even rating in 11 straight games from January 18 to February 12, and was plus-eight in that span. Within that time, he earned five assists in a five game stretch from January 22-February 4, including a three-game assist/point streak, during which Hävelid played his 200th NHL game at San Jose on January 30, 2003. Two months later, he registered four points in a three-game span from March 19-22 (one goal, three assists).

The Ducks began the Stanley Cup Playoffs with a sweep of the Detroit Red Wings in the first round. Moving to the Semifinals, Hävelid contributed in a hard fought series against the Dallas Stars on April 23, 2003, resulting in the 4th longest overtime game in NHL history (Game 1). The match lasted into five overtime periods with an overtime length of 80:43, with goals from fellow Ducks and future Thrashers teammates Jason Krog and Steve Rucchin, yet ended only when Petr Sykora scored the game winning goal for Anaheim to a final score of 4-3. The series would end in six games (4-2).

With a closely contested sweep of the Minnesota Wild, he led the Anaheim Mighty Ducks to their first NHL Western Conference Championship and the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl.

May 27, 2003 would bring Hävelid and the Mighty Ducks to the Stanley Cup Finals against the New Jersey Devils, where he notched a final Playoffs result of four assists in 21 games, sharing second among the defensemen on his team. But the series would end in heartbreak for Anaheim as the Devils won Game 7, 3-0, the third shutout of the series.

The following season would show even better rankings for Hävelid, as he earned 26 points in 79 games with the Ducks (six goals, 20 assists). He would lead the Mighty Ducks defensemen and rank eighth on the team in points, share first among Mighty Ducks defensemen in goals, and top the club's blue liners with career-best five power play goals and three game-winning tallies.

He would also finish second on the club ranking with 22:38 ATOI, just nine seconds per game over the previous season. On December 21, 2003, he took a career-high seven shots against the San Jose Sharks and registered a career-best four assists tying his career high with four points against Minnesota on January 23, 2004 in a regular season rematch. He played his 300th NHL game at Phoenix on March 16.


In the summer of 2004, he was traded to the Thrashers for defenseman Kurtis Foster.

Due to the NHL lockout, he signed as a free agent with Södertälje and re-joined the Atlanta Thrashers the following year, where he plays at the current time.


Awards

Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1988-89 Enköpings SIHA 7 0 1 1 0 - - - - -
1989-80 Enköpings SIHA 24 1 2 3 28 - - - - -
1990-91 Arlanda Wings SIHA 30 2 3 5 22 - - - - -
1991-92 AIK SIHA 10 0 0 0 2 - - - - -
1992-93 AIK SIHA 30 1 2 3 2 3 0 0 0 2
1993-94 AIK SIHA 22 3 9 12 14 - - - - -
1994-95 AIK SIHA 40 3 7 10 38 - - - - -
1995-96 AIK SIHA 40 5 6 11 30 - - - - -
1996-97 AIK SIHA 49 3 6 9 42 7 1 2 3 8
1997-98 AIK SIHA 43 8 4 12 42 10 1 3 4 39
1998-99 Malmö Redhawks SIHA 50 10 12 22 42 8 0 4 4 10
1999-00 Anaheim Mighty Ducks NHL 50 2 7 9 20 - - - - -
Cincinnati Mighty Ducks AHL 2 0 0 0 0 - - - - -
2000-01 Anaheim Mighty Ducks NHL 47 4 10 14 34 - - - - -
2001-02 Anaheim Mighty Ducks NHL 52 1 2 3 40 - - - - -
2002-03 Anaheim Mighty Ducks NHL 82 11 22 33 30 21 0 4 4 2
2003-04 Anaheim Mighty Ducks NHL 79 6 20 26 28 - - - - -
2004-05 Södertälje SIHA 46 2 2 4 60 10 1 1 2 18
2005-06 Atlanta Thrashers NHL 82 4 28 32 48 - - - - -
2006-07 Atlanta Thrashers NHL 77 3 18 21 52 4 0 2 2 0
SIHA totals 391 38 54 92 322 38 3 10 13 77
NHL totals 469 31 107 138 252 25 0 6 6 2

International Play

Niclas Hävelid
Medal record
Representing  Sweden
Men's Ice Hockey
World Junior Championship
Silver medal – second place 1993 Gävle Ice Hockey
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1998 Zürich Ice Hockey
Silver medal – second place 2004 Prague Ice Hockey
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 2006 Turin Ice hockey

Played for Team Sweden in[2]

  • 1991 - European Junior Championships
  • 1993 - World Junior Championship
  • 1995 - Izvestia Tournament
  • 1998 - World Championships (With current teammate Johan Hedberg)
  • 2004 - World Championships
  • 2006 - Olympic Games
    Regular season
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM
1991 Sweden European Junior Championships 6 1 0 1 0
1993 Sweden World Junior Championships 7 0 0 0 10
1998 Sweden World Championships 9 0 2 2 8
2004 Sweden World Championships 9 0 2 2 0
2006 Sweden Olympic Games 7 0 0 0 4
Team Sweden Totals 38 1 4 5 14

Career Transactions

Charitable Work

Niclas Hävelid currently operates an Atlanta based charity named Havelid's Helpers that operates in conjunction with Habitat For Humanity to provide housing for low income families.[3]

Personal Life

Hävelid is known as a fan of soccer, and his favorite team is Manchester United, a soccer club in the British Premier League.

He is married to wife, Anna, and has three children, a daughter, Victoria, and twin sons, Mattias and Hugo.

References

  1. ^ December 19-22, 2002
  2. ^ "World Championship and Olympic Games players in alphabetical order since 1920" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  3. ^ "Havelid Launches Havelid's Helpers' to Benefit Habitat for Humanity". Retrieved 2008-02-21.

See also

Preceded by Winner of the Dan Snyder Memorial Award
2006
Succeeded by