Frisk Asker Ishockey

From International Hockey Wiki
Revision as of 20:50, 30 July 2024 by Admin (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Frisk Asker
Frisk Asker Ishockey logo.png
Full name Frisk Asker Ishockey
Founded 1922
Based In Asker, Norway
Arena Varner Arena
League GET-ligaen
Team Colors

Orange, black, white

              

main

Frisk Asker Ishockey is the ice hockey division of the Norwegian sports club IF Frisk Asker. The team is based in the municipality of Asker and plays its home games in the Varner Arena. The team colours are orange, black and white. Frisk is currently a member of the highest Norwegian ice hockey league, GET-ligaen.

Frisk was founded in 1922 and began playing ice hockey in 1935. Having merged with IK Tigrene in 1969, Frisk became one of the strongest teams in Norwegian ice hockey, winning two Norwegian Championships and four League Championships during the 1970s. In the 2000s, the club won another two titles while competing as the Frisk Tigers.

History

Frisk Tigers logo 1990s–2010

Frisk is one of the oldest ice hockey clubs in Norway dating back to 1935. For most of the early years the club did alright, playing mostly in the lower regional leagues. In 1968 the club was set for a great new era. Farmer Bjørn Mortensen wished to give something back to the community by building an indoor ice rink in Asker. It was the first of its kind in the Oslo area, and gave the club a tremendous lift.

Askerhallen was opened on 31 August 1969, and led to a series of events that would bring Frisk to the pinnacle of Norwegian Ice Hockey in only a few years. In Asker the facilities was first class, but playing material scarce. In Oslo, a club called Tigrene, had the exact opposite problems, so the two clubs decided to merge. Frisk immediately rose to become one of the top teams in the league.

In May 1972 disaster struck, as the Askerhallen was badly damaged in a fire. Mortensen however wished to continue his commitment, and have the arena rebuilt. The new Askerhallen was opened in 1973.

The seventies proved to be the most successful years for Frisk. Winning the Norwegian championships in 1975 and 1979.

Through the eighties Frisk stayed in the top flight, and excelled at producing talented hockey-players. Led by inspirational coach Barry Smith they made a new appearance in the play off finals in 1986. On the most however they failed to make any real impact and economical problems led the club into recession and finally relegation in the mid nineties. A merger with local club Holmen, under the name of Asker Hockey proved unsuccessful and in 1995 Frisk was back in the top league on their own feet.

With local backing and gaining popularity the club went into the new millennium as one of the best teams in the league. In 2002 Frisk could finally celebrate their third Norwegian championship, after beating the Storhamar Dragons in a dramatic final.

Frisk won their fourth Norwegian championship in 2019.

Season-by-season results

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Tigers. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Frisk Asker Ishockey seasons.

Norwegian Champions Regular Season Champions Promoted Relegated
Season League Regular season[1] Postseason
GP W L OTW OTL GF GA Pts Finish
2009–10 Eliteserien 48 12 28 4 4 121 181 51 9th 1st in Qualifying for Eliteserien
2010–11 Eliteserien 45 11 27 4 3 117 174 44 7th Lost in Quarter-finals, 1–4 (Stavanger)
2011–12 Eliteserien 45 5 37 1 2 78 255 19 10th 2nd in Qualifying for Eliteserien
2012–13 Eliteserien 45 20 18 5 2 141 135 72 6th Lost in Quarter-finals, 1–4 (Stavanger)
2013–14 Eliteserien 45 13 24 5 3 122 158 52 7th Lost in Quarter-finals, 1–4 (Vålerenga)
2014–15 Eliteserien 45 24 15 5 1 158 110 71 6th Lost in quarter-finals, 2–4 (Vålerenga)
2015–16 Eliteserien 45 24 12 5 4 139 105 86 3rd Lost in quarter-finals, 2–4 (Vålerenga)
2016–17 Eliteserien 45 21 15 3 6 137 118 75 4th Lost in Finals, 2–4 (Stavanger)
2017–18 Eliteserien 45 24 13 4 4 159 120 84 4th Lost in semi-finals, 1–4 (Storhamar)
2018–19 Eliteserien 48 22 18 4 4 162 151 78 5th Won Norwegian Championship, 4–2 (Storhamar)
2019–20 Eliteserien 45 24 18 1 2 135 125 76 4th Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2020–21 Eliteserien 23 17 5 0 1 92 52 52 1st
2021–22 Eliteserien 45 22 15 5 3 171 138 79 5th Lost in quarter-finals, 2–4 (Sparta)
2022–23 Eliteserien 45 21 16 4 4 146 144 75 6th Lost in quarter-finals, 0–4 (Vålerenga)
2023–24 Eliteserien 45 23 15 2 5 167 129 78 5th Lost in semi-finals, 1–4 (Storhamar)

Notes and references

  1. Code explanation; GP—Games Played, W—Wins, L—Losses, OTW—Overtime/Shootout wins, OTL—Overtime/Shootout losses, GF—Goals For, GA—Goals Against, Pts—Points

External links

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