2013–14 HockeyAllsvenskan season

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2013–14 HockeyAllsvenskan season
League HockeyAllsvenskan
Sport Ice hockey
Number of teams 14
Total attendance 1,097,855
Average attendance 3,016
TV partner(s) Viasat
First place Malmö Redhawks
Top scorer Joey Tenute (MIF)
Promoted from {{{promote_from}}} Djurgårdens IF
Relegated to Division 1 IF Troja/Ljungby
HockeyAllsvenskan seasons

The 2013–14 HockeyAllsvenskan season began on 12 September 2013[1] and included 14 teams. IF Björklöven, Swedish champions in 1987, rejoined the league, following a three-year stint in Division 1 (now named Hockeyettan) after their near-bankruptcy in 2010.[2][3] They replaced Tingsryds AIF, who were demoted to Division 1 following a third-place finish in the 2013 Kvalserien till Hockeyallsvenskan. Also new to the league were Timrå IK and Rögle BK, both of whom were demoted from Elitserien (now called the SHL), replacing Leksands IF and Örebro HK who were promoted up to the SHL in their stead.

The 2013–14 HockeyAllsvenskan was covered by media partner Viasat, who purchased the rights to the league in 2011.[4]

Format

In the regular season, each team plays every other team twice at home and twice away, which gives a 52-game schedule per team. Following the regular season, the two teams with the worst records are forced to play a qualification tournament ("Kvalserien till HockeyAllsvenskan") to avoid demotion to Sweden's third-tier league, Division 1 (now named Hockeyettan). The teams that finish in 4th through 7th place will play a double-round robin playoff, the winner of which will join the top three teams in "Kvalserien till SHL", where they will have a chance to qualify for promotion to the Swedish Hockey League, in competition with the two teams with the worst records from the 2013–14 SHL season.

Participating teams

Team City Arena Capacity
Almtuna IS Uppsala Metallåtervinning Arena 2,800
Asplöven HC Haparanda Arena Polarica 1,500
IF Björklöven Umeå T3 Center 5,400
Djurgårdens IF Stockholm Hovet 8,094
BIK Karlskoga Karlskoga Nobelhallen 6,300
Karlskrona HK Karlskrona Telenor Arena Karlskrona 3,464
IF Malmö Redhawks Malmö Malmö Arena 13,000
Mora IK Mora FM Mattsson Arena 4,514
IK Oskarshamn Oskarshamn Arena Oskarshamn 3,346
Rögle BK Ängelholm Lindab Arena 5,150
Södertälje SK Södertälje AXA Sports Center 6,130
Timrå IK Timrå E.ON Arena 6,000
Troja/Ljungby Ljungby Sunnerbohov 3,700
VIK Västerås HK Västerås ABB Arena Nord 4,920

Regular season

Standings

2013–14 HockeyAllsvenskan season GP W T L OTW OTL GF GA +/– Pts
IF Malmö Redhawksk 52 30 10 12 5 5 160 113 +47 105
VIK Västerås HKk 52 26 13 13 9 4 134 103 +30 100
Djurgårdens IFk 52 23 19 10 8 11 152 111 +41 96
BIK Karlskogap 52 25 14 13 5 8 158 120 +38 94
Karlskrona HKp 52 25 7 20 3 4 154 119 +35 85
Mora IKp 52 19 14 19 9 5 154 133 +21 80
Rögle BKp 52 21 11 20 6 5 131 141 –10 80
Timrå IKe 52 18 16 18 6 10 124 125 –1 76
IK Oskarshamne 52 19 10 23 4 6 134 157 –23 71
Almtuna ISe 52 14 18 20 9 9 117 132 –15 69
Asplöven HCe 52 18 9 25 6 3 126 153 –27 69
Södertälje SKe 52 16 12 24 6 6 124 147 –23 66
IF Troja/Ljungbyr 52 8 18 26 9 9 111 166 –55 51
IF Björklövenr 52 13 7 32 4 3 112 170 –58 50

k – qualified for 2014 Kvalserien; p – qualified for PlayOff-serien; e – eliminated from playoff contention; r – play in 2014 Kvalserien till HockeyAllsvenskan


PlayOff-serien

PlayOff-serien, in previous seasons called Förkvalserien, was played between the teams ranked fourth through seventh in the regular season. They played a double round-robin tournament, the winner Rögle BK continued to the 2014 Kvalserien for the 2014–15 SHL season. The teams were given points before the start of the play-offs depending on which position they achieved in the regular season. BIK Karlskoga were given four points, Karlskrona HK were given three points, Mora IK were given two points and Rögle BK were given one point.

2014 PlayOff-serien GP W T L OTW OTL GF GA +/– Pts
Rögle BKk 6 4 2 0 2 0 21 11 +10 17
Karlskrona HKe 6 3 2 1 1 1 23 15 +8 15
BIK Karlskogae 6 1 1 4 0 1 13 23 –10 8
Mora IKe 6 1 1 4 0 1 18 26 –8 6

k – qualified for 2014 Kvalserien; e – qualified for 2014–15 HockeyAllsvenskan


2014 Kvalserien to HockeyAllsvenskan

The two teams ranked 13th and 14th after the regular season, IF Troja/Ljungby and IF Björklöven, were forced to play in the Kvalserien qualification series to defend their spots in HockeyAllsvenskan. They played a double round-robin tournament against the four playoff winners from the third-tier Division 1 (now named Hockeyettan). IF Björklöven defended their HockeyAllsvenskan spot while IF Troja/Ljungby were relegated to Division 1 at the expense of HC Vita Hästen.

* Teams 1–2 qualify for 2014–15 HockeyAllsvenskan season
* Teams 3–6 qualify for 2014–15 Hockeyettan season
# Team GP W T L GF GA GD TP OTW OTL GWSW GWSL
1 HC Vita Hästen 10 6 3 1 44 28 +16 23 2 1 0 0
2 IF Björklöven 10 6 3 1 31 23 +8 21 0 2 0 1
3 IF Troja/Ljungby 10 4 2 4 33 36 –3 16 1 0 1 0
4 Tingsryds AIF 10 3 3 4 31 26 +5 13 1 2 0 0
5 Kallinge-Ronneby IF 10 3 0 7 25 38 –13 9 0 0 0 0
6 Piteå HC 10 2 1 7 24 37 –13 8 1 0 0 0

2014 Kvalserien to SHL

See: 2014 Kvalserien.

References

  1. Svenska Ishockeyförbundet. Schedule and Results. Retrieved 2013-07-02.
  2. Wahlberg, Malin; Norberg, Linus (2013-04-05). "Björklöven tillbaka i allsvenskan" (in Swedish). Sportbladet. aftonbladet.se. http://www.aftonbladet.se/sportbladet/article16550384.ab. Retrieved 2013-07-03. 
  3. Pär Andersson and TT (2010-05-24). "Björklöven lever - undviker konkurs" (in Swedish). Expressen. expressen.se. http://www.expressen.se/sport/hockey/hockeyallsvenskan/bjorkloven-lever---undviker-konkurs/. Retrieved 2013-07-03. 
  4. Expressen: Viasat storsatsar på Hockeyallsvenskan. 2011-05-30. Retrieved 2013-07-02.


HockeyAllsvenskan seasons
Allsvenskan seasons (1999-2005)

1999–2000 - 2000–01 - 2001–02 - 2002–03 - 2003–04 - 2004–05

HockeyAllsvenskan seasons (2005-present)

2005–06 - 2006–07 - 2007–08 - 2008–09 - 2009–10 - 2010–11 - 2011–12 - 2012–13 - 2013–14 - 2014–15 - 2015–16 - 2016–17 - 2017–18 - 2018–19 - 2019–20 - 2020–21 - 2021–22 - 2022–23 - 2023–24

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