Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
02/03 15:00 | 1 | [8] 윙스 알란다 v 볼렌지 [4] | 2-4 |
02/03 14:00 | 1 | [3] 달렌 v 칼링-로네비 [10] | 2-1 |
02/03 14:00 | 1 | [3] 선츠발 v 린들로벤스 [2] | 1-0 |
02/02 18:00 | 1 | [9] 비스뷔-로마 v 셰브데 [8] | 3-4 |
02/02 18:00 | 1 | [10] Eskilstuna Linden v Mjolby [8] | 4-3 |
02/02 18:00 | 1 | [3] Alvesta SK v 트로자-륭비 [1] | 1-5 |
02/01 18:30 | 1 | [7] 외른셸스비크 v 칼릭스 [6] | 0-5 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [4] 모르럼 고이스 v 보라스 [3] | 3-5 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [3] 크리스티안스타드 v 할름스타드 [2] | 3-4 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [10] 칼링-로네비 v 마리에스타드 [7] | 2-1 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [6] 칼스크로나 v 달렌 [4] | 0-1 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [1] 빔머비 v 트라나스 [5] | 2-3 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [5] 한비켄스 SK v 린들로벤스 [3] | 1-4 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [5] 키루나 v 피테오 [4] | 1-4 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [2] 베스뷔 v 선츠발 [3] | 2-3 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [1] 후딕스발 v Nykopings [8] | 4-3 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [8] 타이링게 v 세겔토릅스 IF [9] | 4-1 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [6] 후딩게 v 포르샤가 [5] | 5-4 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [10] 반나스 v Clemensnas HC [4] | 1-5 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [5] 볼렌지 v 수라함마 [9] | 5-2 |
01/31 18:00 | 1 | [2] Falu v 엔코핑스 [3] | 2-3 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [5] 트라나스 v 칼링-로네비 [10] | 5-2 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [7] 마리에스타드 v 비스뷔-로마 [9] | 3-5 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [8] Nykopings v 후딕스발 [1] | 3-1 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [7] 베스뷔 v 보덴 [2] | 6-3 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [9] Mjolby v 모르럼 고이스 [4] | 5-4 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [6] 포르샤가 v Eskilstuna Linden [10] | 3-0 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [8] 세겔토릅스 IF v Alvesta SK [2] | 1-3 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [3] 보라스 v 타이링게 [7] | 8-2 |
01/28 15:00 | 1 | [2] Falu v 외른셸스비크 [8] | 2-3 |
Hockeyettan is the third tier of ice hockey in Sweden. As of the 2015–16 season, the league consists of 39 teams divided geographically into four groups. Hockeyettan operates a system of promotion and relegation with HockeyAllsvenskan and Division 2.
From 1944 to 1975, Division I was the highest league in the Swedish ice hockey system, but with the creation of Elitserien (now the SHL) in 1975, it became the second tier. Division I was further relegated to third-tier status in 1999 as HockeyAllsvenskan was spun off into a standalone league, but was frequently written as "Division 1" on the Internet, as it was pronounced "Division One". The league was renamed Hockeyettan for the 2014–15 season.
Hockeyettan is the lowest tier to be organized by the Swedish Ice Hockey Association; all men's tiers below Hockeyettan are organized regionally.
Season | Winners | Runners-up |
---|---|---|
1945 | Hammarby IF | Södertälje SK |
1946 | Hammarby IF | Södertälje SK |
1947 | Hammarby IF | Södertälje SK |
1948 | Södertälje SK | Hammarby IF |
1949 | Hammarby IF | Gävle GIK |
1950 | Södertälje SK | Hammarby IF |
1951 | Djurgårdens IF | AIK |
1952 | Södertälje SK | Gävle GIK |
1953 | Södertälje SK | Hammarby IF |
1954 | Djurgårdens IF | Gävle Godtemplares IK |
1955 | Djurgårdens IF | Hammarby IF |
1956 | Södertälje SK | Djurgårdens IF |
1957 | Gävle Godtemplares IK | Djurgårdens IF |
1958 | Djurgårdens IF | Skellefteå AIK |
1959 | Djurgårdens IF | Leksands IF |
1960 | Djurgårdens IF | Södertälje SK |
1961 | Djurgårdens IF | Skellefteå AIK |
1962 | Djurgårdens IF | Västra Frölunda IF |
1963 | Djurgårdens IF | Skellefteå AIK |
1964 | Brynäs IF | Leksands IF |
1965 | Västra Frölunda IF | Brynäs IF |
1966 | Brynäs IF | Västra Frölunda IF |
1967 | Brynäs IF | Västra Frölunda IF |
1968 | Brynäs IF | AIK |
1969 | Leksands IF | Brynäs IF |
1970 | Brynäs IF | Västra Frölunda IF |
1971 | Brynäs IF | Leksands IF |
1972 | Brynäs IF | Leksands IF |
1973 | Leksands IF | Södertälje SK |
1974 | Leksands IF | Timrå IK |
1975 | Leksands IF | Brynäs IF |
Division 1 was founded in 1944, replacing Svenska Serien as the top flight of Swedish ice hockey. From its foundation until the 1954–55 season, the league consisted of twelve teams, with group winners facing off in a best-of-three final, and with two teams from the bottom of each group being relegated. From the 1955–56 season, the best-of-three series was replaced with a double round-robin final round with the top two teams from each group. The league was expanded to two groups of eight for the 1956–57 season. The league would continue to have two groups of eight under a variety of different post-season formats until the 1974–75 season. With Elitserien, a new top flight of Swedish hockey to begin play the following year, this final Division 1 season was played in a single group of 16, with the top 10 teams going on to play in the new Elitserien, and the bottom six remaining in Division 1 in its new status as Sweden's second-tier league.
Division 1 was a much broader league as the second tier, consisting of 49 teams in its inaugural season, eventually being reduced to ca. 40, and then 32 during its final second-tier season in 1998–99. During this entire period, the league was divided into four geographical groups, and operated a system of promotion and relegation with Elitserien and Division 2. Starting in the 1982–83 season, the top teams from each group formed a new group in the spring called Allsvenskan. For the 1999–2000 season, Allsvenskan was spun off into a new second-tier league, resulting in Division 1 becoming the third tier of Swedish hockey.
Division 1's relegation to third-tier status resulted in a massive expansion in the number of teams. 78 teams participated in the 1999–2000 season, though this was reduced over the following seasons. Initially, the league was divided into four regions, all of which were further divided into two groups. By the 2004–05 season, Division 1 had been cut all the way down to 48 teams that were organized into four groups. The league expanded again to 54 teams the following season, and would be numbered in the fifties until 2014.
In 2014, the league was rebranded Hockeyettan, and trimmed down to 48 teams competing in the current format with four starting groups of twelve that are then reorganized into 6 groups of eight in the spring. For the first season under this format, the Hockey Association decided to have only 11 teams in Hockeyettan North, giving a total of 47 teams.