Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Växjö Lakers

Växjö Lakers

FieldValue
current2025–26 SHL season
text_color#000000
bg_colorbackground:#FFFFFF; border-top:#f37932 5px solid; border-bottom:#003781 5px solid;
teamVäxjö Lakers
logoVäxjö Lakers logo.svg
logo_size230px
cityVäxjö, Sweden
leagueSwedish Hockey League
founded1997
arenaVida Arena
capacity5,750
colors
gmHenrik Evertsson
coachBjörn Hellkvist
captainJoel Persson
website[vaxjolakers.se](https://www.vaxjolakers.se/p/)
le_mat_trophies([2015](2014-15-shl-season), [2018](2017-18-shl-season), [2021](2020-21-shl-season), [2023](2022-23-shl-season))

The Växjö Lakers Hockey Club (often referred to as the Växjö Lakers or VLH) are a Swedish professional ice hockey club from Växjö in Sweden. The club plays at the Vida Arena and plays in the Swedish Hockey League (SHL; formerly Elitserien), the top-level league of Swedish ice hockey, and made its debut there in 2011–12. Since entering the SHL the club has become known as one of the premier SHL clubs, winning the Le Mat Trophy as Swedish national Champions four times in 2015, 2018, 2021 and 2023 (the most of any SHL clubs since their promotion). Forwards Erik Josefsson and Robert Rosén are the only players to be a part of all four Championship-winning teams.

History

The club was founded in 1997, after Växjö HC went bankrupt that year. Växjö Lakers originally played in Växjö Ishall as their home arena, but prior to the 2011–12 season they moved to Vida Arena. The construction of the Vida Arena was finished in summer 2011.

The club began play in the 1997–98 season. Starting in Division 4, four divisions below the Elitserien/SHL, Växjö worked its way to HockeyAllsvenskan within 6 years, being promoted 3 times. With a perfect record in the 2003 HockeyAllsvenskan Kvalserien, the club qualified for HockeyAllsvenskan. Sensationally, during their debut season in HockeyAllsvenskan, the club acquired Shjon Podein, an NHL-merited North American player who played 699 NHL games and won the Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche in 2001. The acquirement was described as "årets värvning" (acquirement of the year) by some people. During Podein's years in Växjö he became a crowd favorite. Prior to the following season, the 2004–05 season, the team also acquired Brad DeFauw, another NHL-merited North American player who played 9 NHL games and 154 AHL games. Both Shjon Podein and Brad DeFauw left the team after the 2004–05 season.

The club would spend 8 seasons in HockeyAllsvenskan and, during that time, reach the Kvalserien qualification for Elitserien three times. Växjö did not manage to promote to Elitserien in the 2009 and 2010 respective Kvalserien qualifications, but after winning the 2010–11 HockeyAllsvenskan season for the first time in club history and earning a third consecutive trip to Kvalserien, Växjö secured promotion to the top-tier league Elitserien in the eighth round (of ten) in the 2011 Kvalserien. The team finished the 2011 Kvalserien with 26 points, which is a record in the Kvalserien history.

The team formerly used red, yellow and blue as its colours, both in the team's logo and the team's jerseys. On 18 April 2011 it was announced that the club had changed the colours of their jerseys to blue and orange prior to the 2011–12 season. At that time it was also announced that the club's logo had been changed to an orange shield containing the name of the club beneath a lion holding a crossbow – an image from the Småland coat of arms.

Elitserien/Swedish Hockey League

Växjö's home venue Vida Arena.

The club's first game in the Elitserien league was played on 13 September 2011, losing 0–2 to Frölunda HC in front of an outsold Scandinavium. Two days later, the club historically took their first points in Elitserien, beating Luleå HF on away ice 3–2 in a shootout, despite trailing by two goals in the third period. Their first home game was played on September 17, against Linköpings HC, in front of an outsold Vida Arena. Linköping won the game 4–2. Former Växjö Lakers crowd favorite Shjon Podein watched the game in the arena. Their first home points and regulation-time win came on September 27, when the Lakers won 4–1 against Modo Hockey. The Lakers' first shutout came on away ice when Modo were beaten 2–0 on 25 October 2011.

Växjö Lakers played the first Småland derby game in Elitserien history, which was on away ice against reigning regular-season champions HV71, on 8 October 2011 in front of an outsold Kinnarps Arena—exactly 7,000 spectators—in Jönköping. Växjö Lakers came out on top with a 3–2 victory in a shootout. Växjö Lakers forward Mike Iggulden scored three penalty shot goals in the game, two of them counted in the statistics.

Season-by-season record

SeasonLevelDivisionRecordAvg.
home
atnd.NotesPositionW-OT-L
*This list features the five most recent completed seasons. For prior seasons, see List of Växjö Lakers seasons.*
**2020–21**Tier 1**[SHL](2020-21-shl-season)****1st**34–6–1–1121
[Swedish Championship playoffs](2020-21-shl-season-playoffs)11–38**Won finals**, 4–1 vs Rögle BK
**2021–22**Tier 1**[SHL](2021-22-shl-season)**5th28–5–2–173,691
[Swedish Championship playoffs](2021-22-shl-season-playoffs)0–45,420Lost in quarterfinals 0–4 vs Frölunda HC
**2022–23**Tier 1**[SHL](2022-23-shl-season)****1st**27–7–7–114,760
[Swedish Championship playoffs](2022-23-shl-season-playoffs)12–65,509**Won finals**, 4–1 vs Skellefteå AIK
**2023–24**Tier 1**[SHL](2023-24-shl-season)**2nd29–4–4–154,952
[Swedish Championship playoffs](2023-24-shl-season-playoffs)4–45,564Lost in semifinals 0–4 vs Rögle BK
**2024–25**Tier 1**[SHL](2024-25-shl-season)**8th17–9–7–195,111
[Eighth-finals](2024-25-shl-season-eighth-finals)2–15,257Won 2–1 vs Örebro HK
[Swedish Championship playoffs](2024-25-shl-season-playoffs)1–45,342Lost in quarterfinals 1–4 vs Luleå HF

Players and personnel

Current roster

Updated 29 July 2025.

Team captains

  • Mikael Bjerdahl, 2003–04
  • Torsten Yngvesson, 2004–07
  • Johan Markusson, 2008–14
  • Tomi Kallio, 2014–15
  • Liam Reddox, 2015–19
  • Erik Josefsson, 2019–23
  • Joel Persson, 2023–Present

Honored members

No.PlayerPositionCareerNo. retirement
**14**Stefan NilssonF1990–1991, 1997–2003
**38**Johan MarkussonRW2005–2014
**85**Liam ReddoxLW2011–2019

Club records and leaders

Scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers of the Växjö Lakers since their promotion to the SHL in the 2011–12 season. Figures are updated after each completed season.

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; = current Växjö Lakers player

PlayerPosGPGAPtsP/G
Robert Rosén
Joel Persson
Liam Reddox
Erik Josefsson
Richard Gynge
Tuomas Kiiskinen
Cory Murphy
Tomi Kallio
Dennis Rasmussen
Emil Pettersson

Trophies and awards

Team

Le Mat Trophy

  • 2014–15, 2017–18, 2020–21, 2022–23

Individual

Coach of the Year

  • Sam Hallam: 2017–18 Honken Trophy
  • Viktor Fasth: 2017–18 Rookie of the Year
  • Elias Pettersson: 2017–18

References

References

  1. Anders Feltenmark. (24 April 2015). "Växjö Lakers HC svenska mästare". Swedish Ice Hockey Association.
  2. (2003-11-04). "Änderson om avund". LakersLakejer.net.
  3. (2004-10-19). "Shjon Podein har landat i Växjö". [[Sveriges Radio]]'.
  4. (2011-04-18). "Orange revolution i Växjö Lakers". [[Smålandsposten]].
  5. Jonas Gustavsson. (2011-09-15). "Kallio fixade historisk vinst". Växjö Lakers Hockey.
  6. Jonas Gustavsson. (2011-09-16). "Invigningsöverraskningen: Podein på plats i VIDA Arena". Växjö Lakers Hockey.
  7. Jonas Gustavsson. (2011-09-27). "Första segern i VIDA Arena". Växjö Lakers Hockey.
  8. Jonas Gustavsson. (2011-10-25). "Seger – och första nollan". Växjö Lakers Hockey.
  9. Bosse Johander. (2011-10-08). "Historiskt derby i Småland". [[Sveriges Radio]].
  10. Per Johansson. (2011-10-08). "Iggulden straffade HV71 i smålandsderbyt". [[Växjö Lakers Hockey]].
  11. (30 July 2025). "Season standings". Swedish Hockey League.
  12. (29 July 2025). "Växjö Lakers roster". eliteprospects.com.
  13. (2025-07-30). "Växjö Lakers - All Time SHL leaders".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Växjö Lakers — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report