- Ulf Sterner
Infobox Ice Hockey Player
position = Left wing/Centre
shoots = Left
height_ft = 6
height_in = 2
weight_lb = 187
team =
former_teams =New York Rangers
league = NHL
nationality = Sweden
birth_date = Birth date and age|1941|2|11|mf=y
birth_place =Deje ,Värmland , SWE
career_start = 1956
career_end = 1990
draft =
draft_year =
draft_team =
image_size =Ulf "Uffe" Sterner (born
February 11 ,1941 ) is a Swedish retiredice hockey forward. He played in nineIIHF World Championships for Sweden, where the team won seven medals: one gold, five silver, and one bronze. He was also a member of the silver medal team at the1964 Winter Olympics . OnJanuary 27 ,1965 , he became the first European-trained player to play in theNational Hockey League (NHL). Sterner played forForshaga IF from 1956–61, Västra Frölunda IF from 1961–64, and for theNew York Rangers in 1964–65, before returning to Sweden to play forRögle BK andFärjestads BK . He finished his career inEngland with theLondon Lions in 1973–74.Sterner made his hockey debut at 15 when he was accepted onto a second division club where he made a name for himself with his speed and scoring ability. On
November 12 ,1959 , he made his international debut with Tre Kronor in a friendly match againstCzechoslovakia 's team. He scored his first goal in that game, which Tre Kronor won 11-3. He was the team's youngest player of all time. Through the late 1950s and early 1960s, he was one of Sweden's most popular players. He is also credited with inventing the "stick to skate to stick" maneuver. At the1962 World Ice Hockey Championships , Sterner scored what he described as his most memorable goal when he scored the 3–0 goal against Team Canada.cite web | url = http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=14447 | title = Ulf Sterner | publisher = "Legends of Hockey" | accessdate = 2008-07-04] His team won the game 5– and took the gold medal. [cite web | url = http://www.iihf.com/iihf-home/the-iihf/100-year-anniversary/100-top-stories/story-57.html | title = Tre Kronor’s win over Canada becomes sports lore in Sweden | publisher = IIHF | accessdate = 2008-07-04] At the 1963 World Championship, he scored a hat trick against Canada in a 4–1 win. After the game, he and teammate Tumba Johansson met King Gustav VI and received a royal congratulations.His first Olympics came in 1960 in
Squaw Valley . The team did not earn a medal, but from that point on he was a dominating centre in international play. By 1963, the New York Rangers had taken interest, and in October, Sterner made the trip for training camp. The parties signed a five-game tryout agreement, but Sterner declined to play that season in order to conserve his amateur status for the1964 Winter Olympics . The team won a silver medal. Sterner arrived for training camp in 1964 and displayed excellent skills. However, the NHL, unlike theInternational Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), permitted hitting and physical play on any point of the ice; international players were not allowed to hit in the offensive zone. Allowing him time to adjust to the North American game, the Rangers offered him a start with theSt. Paul Rangers of the Central League, which he accepted. After two months, he adapted and earned a promotion to theBaltimore Clippers of theAmerican Hockey League . Finally, on January 27, 1965, he joined the Rangers in a game against theBoston Bruins , becoming the first European to play in the NHL.cite web | url = http://www.iihf.com/iihf-home/the-iihf/100-year-anniversary/100-top-stories/story-70.html | title = Swede Ulf Sterner - the first European in the NHL | publisher = IIHF | accessdate = 2008-07-04]Ultimately, Sterner played only four games in the NHL, and he did not register a point. He had been reluctant to play physically or to instigate physical play. He was sent back down to the AHL, and it soon became clear that he was not going to return to the NHL. As much as his skills carried him through games in the AHL, he simply did not have the training to play 60-minute games with full contact. In 1969, the IIHF adopted the same body-checking rules as the NHL, and four years later,
Borje Salming joined theToronto Maple Leafs and played in the NHL for 17 years.Sterner, his wife Pia, and their family currently live on a farm near
Karlstad , where they keep four horses. He nicknames his horses after former teammates and friends; when one of the horses smashed his nose, he nicknamed itAlexander Ragulin .tatistics
Career
Awards
*Won the
Golden Puck as Sweden's Player of the Year in 1962–63.
*Named the best forward at theIIHF World Championships in 1969.
*Inducted into theIIHF Hall of Fame in 2001.
*WEC-A All-Star Team (1962, 1969)References
External links
*hockeydb|10625|Ulf Sterner
Persondata
NAME = Sterner, Ulf
ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Uffe
SHORT DESCRIPTION = Swedish ice hockey forward
DATE OF BIRTH =February 11 ,1941
PLACE OF BIRTH =Värmland ,Sweden
DATE OF DEATH =
PLACE OF DEATH =
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