HIFK Naiset

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
HIFK Naiset
HIFK Stadin Gimmat logo-2023.png
City: Helsinki
League: Naisten Liiga
Founded: 1982 (1982)
Refounded 2018
Home Arena: Pirkkolan jäähalli
Colors: Red, white, dark blue
              
Affiliate(s): HIFK Akatemia
HIFK Challenger
Parent club(s): HIFK
Franchise history
1982–1989: HIFK Naiset
2018–present: HIFK Naiset
(Stadin Gimmat)

HIFK Naiset, also known as Stadin Gimmat, a nickname for Helsinki), is an ice hockey team in the Finnish Naisten Liiga (NSML). They play in the Pirkkola district of Helsinki at the Pirkkolan jäähalli. The team is the representative women's ice hockey team of the multisport club Idrottsföreningen Kamraterna, Helsingfors (abbreviated IFK Helsingfors/IFK Helsinki or HIFK) and is operated by Oy HIFK-Hockey Ab, the same organization that owns the HIFK men's ice hockey team of the Liiga – HIFK Naiset are one of only two Naisten Liiga teams owned directly by a Liiga team.[1]

The original HIFK Naiset was one of the ten founding teams from the inaugural 1982–83 Naisten SM-sarja season but they were financially relegated in 1989 and the club chose not to pursue women's ice hockey for the following several decades. The current team was established in 2018 and gained promotion to the Naisten Liiga from the second-tier Naisten Mestis at the end of their debut season in 2018–19.[2]

HIFK-Stadin Gimmat has two affiliate teams, HIFK Akatemia and HIFK Challenger (known as HIFK U18 from 2018 to 2023), which are active in the Naisten Mestis and Naisten Suomi-sarja, respectively.

History

Original team, 1982–1989

HIFK Naiset was one of the original ten teams to play in the inaugural season, 1982–83, of the Naisten SM-sarja; renamed Naisten Liiga in 2017). The team struggled early on, forced to compete with fellow Helsinki-based team Helsingin Jääkiekkoklubi (HJK) for top talent. HIFK finished in the bottom half of the league in their first five seasons, ranking seventh of ten teams in 1982–83, ninth of twelve in 1983–84, eighth of thirteen in 1984–85, fifth of eight in 1985–86, and sixth of eight in 1986–87.

The team's fortunes turned in the 1987–88 season and they earned a 7-2-5 (win-tie-loss) record with a +3 goal difference and claimed third place in the Naisten SM-sarja playoffs, earning Finnish Championship bronze. With a 1988–89 roster that included three members of the newly-created Finnish women's national ice hockey team – defensemen Johanna Ikonen and Maria Turki (Novitsky), and forward Ulla Saarikko – HIFK continued their upward trajectory, posting an 8-2-4 record with a +20 goal differential and claiming Finnish Championship bronze for the second consecutive season.

Despite the marked improvement of the team, HIFK was financially relegated after the 1988–89 season and no senior women's representative team or any programs for women and girls existed in the club for the following twenty-five years.

Season-by-season results

This is a list of all seasons completed by HIFK Naiset, including the original HIFK Naiset (1982–1989) and HIFK Naiset-Stadin Gimmat (2018–present).[3]

Season League Preliminaries and regular season Post season results
Finish GP W OTW T OTL L GF GA Pts Top scorer
1982–83 Naisten SM-sarja 7th 8 3 0 5 43 26 6 Flag of Finland S-L. Aura 17 (15+2) Did not qualify
1983–84 Naisten SM-sarja 9th 8 2 0 6 27 42 4 Flag of Finland M. Böckelman 10 (5+5) Did not qualify
1984–85 Naisten SM-sarja 8th 9 3 0 6 26 29 6 Flag of Finland A. Kaunola 8 (6+2) Did not qualify
1985–86 Naisten SM-sarja 5th 14 3 4 7 36 40 10 Flag of Finland H. Leppälä 11 (7+4) Did not qualify
1986–87 Naisten SM-sarja 6th 14 6 0 8 33 39 12 Did not qualify
1987–88 Naisten SM-sarja 3rd 14 7 2 5 35 32 16 Flag of Finland A. Kaunola 13 (11+2) Won bronze medal
1988–89 Naisten SM-sarja 3rd 14 8 2 4 53 33 18 Flag of Finland A. Kaunola 22 (15+7) Won bronze medal
2018–19 Naisten Mestis 1st 26 24 1 0 1 159 26 74 Flag of Finland Mi. Klemola 50 (23+27) Promoted to Naisten Liiga
2019–20 Naisten Liiga 7th 30 15 2 3 10 124 74 52 Flag of France E. Passard 47 (28+19) Lost quarterfinals, 0–3 (Kärpät)
2020–21 Naisten Liiga 3rd 27 16 4 1 6 104 57 57 Flag of France E. Passard 37 (19+21) Won bronze medal, 2–1 (Ilves)
2021–22 Naisten Liiga 2nd 29 26 0 0 3 137 41 78 Flag of Finland M. Nilsson 55 (37+18) Lost final, 2–3 (K-Espoo)
2022–23 Naisten Liiga 1st 36 29 3 0 4 197 57 93 Flag of the Czech Republic M. Pejzlová 82 (32+50) Won Championship, 3–0 (K-Espoo)
2023–24 Naisten Liiga 2nd 32 27 0 0 5 175 49 75 Flag of the Czech Republic M. Pejzlová 71 (30+41) Won Championship, 3–1 (K-Espoo)

References

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).