Markus Näslund

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Position Left/Right Wing
Shoots Left
Nickname(s) Nazzy
Macke
Mackan
Height
Weight
5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
195 lb (88 kg/13.9 st)
NHL Team
F. Teams
Vancouver Canucks
Pittsburgh Penguins
Nationality Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden
Born July 30 1973 (1973-07-30) (age 36),
Örnsköldsvik, SWE
NHL Draft 16th overall, 1991
Pittsburgh Penguins
Pro Career 1993 – present

Markus Näslund (born July 30, 1973, in Örnsköldsvik, Sweden) is a professional Swedish ice hockey player and is currently the captain of the Vancouver Canucks in the National Hockey League. He is often referred to as "Nazzy" by Canucks fans, while he is nicknamed "Macke" and "Mackan" in his native Sweden.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Näslund has played 10 seasons for the Vancouver Canucks as of 2007. The Pittsburgh Penguins originally drafted Näslund in the first round, 16th overall, in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft. He was acquired in exchange for Alek Stojanov (Generally regarded as one of the most lopsided trades in NHL history) on March 20, 1996.[1] Näslund's first two complete seasons with the Canucks were largely uneventful, and he was not a favorite of coach Mike Keenan. At the start of the 1997-98 season, Keenan scratched a healthy Näslund. As a result, the winger asked the team to trade him. The request was denied.[citation needed] The following season, Näslund led the Canucks in scoring during a period of rebuilding for the franchise. His 36 goals and 66 points were vast improvements over the 14 goals and 34 points from the previous season, and would serve as the starting point for Näslund's ascent to NHL stardom. This was the star that Pittsburgh hoped to see during his time with their organization. His breakthrough season would arrive in 2000-01 when, in a press conference at the Canucks' training camp held that year in Sweden[2], he was appointed team captain by general manager Brian Burke on September 15.[1] Näslund went on to set personal highs that season in goals and points, and led the Canucks to their first playoff appearance since 1996. His 41-goal, 75-point campaign would be cut short late in the season by a broken leg, and an already injury-decimated Canucks team would fail to make any headway in the post-season, losing their best-of-seven series against the Colorado Avalanche in 4 straight games.

Näslund returned from his injury the following season, breaking his personal record with a 90-point season which included 40 goals. Once centreman Brendan Morrison became the normal third member of Näslund and Bertuzzi's forward line in 2002-03, the usual Vancouver top line was established, and was dubbed the West Coast Express (named after Vancouver's commuter rail service of the same name). The line earned the Canucks a great deal of attention, and Näslund finished 2002-03 with career highs of 48 goals and 104 points, to finish second overall in NHL scoring. The 2002-03 season, stastically Näslund's best, culminated with him winning the Lester B. Pearson Award, and finishing as first runner-up for the Hart Trophy. The Canucks lost their final game of the regular season to the Los Angeles Kings, and along with it the Northwest Division Championship, which the Avalanche were awarded for the ninth consecutive season. After the game in front of a sellout home crowd, Näslund apologized, going as far as to say that the team 'choked.'[citation needed] Vancouver won its first round playoff matchup against the St. Louis Blues in 7 games after trailing 3 games to 1. The Canucks then lost to the Minnesota Wild in the next round, failing to finish off a 3-1 series lead of their own.

Näslund led the Canucks in scoring again in 2003-04, the sixth straight season he has done so, finishing with 35 goals and 84 points. During the NHL labour conflict he represented his hometown team MODO Hockey of the Elitserien in Sweden.

His contract with the Canucks expired in 2005, but he re-signed for three more years. Once again, he would lead the Canucks in scoring in the 05-06 season with 32 goals and 79 points. However, he chose not to join the Swedish national team at the 2006 Winter Olympics due to an injury.[1]

Naslund's production fell off a bit in the 06-07 season as coach Alain Vigneault took the helm of the Canucks and introduced a new defence-first system. Naslund remains today a strong leader on a Canucks team that has seen many changes in the past few years. On Wednesday, November 21, 2007, Naslund scored his 11th career hat-trick in a much hyped game against the Minnesota Wild. It was his first hat-trick since December 2003.

On December 5th 2007 Markus Naslund became the canucks franchise leading scorer by an assist on a Mattias Ohlund goal, Passing Trevor Linden with 725 points. Markus Naslund has been somewhat resurgment compared to his past 60 point campaign, on a line with the Sedin twins, currently Markus has 34 points in 40 games.

[edit] Preferences with sticks

While fans feel that Markus should switch to composite, Markus is one of the few players in the NHL that still uses wooden sticks (Nike Bauer One75). He said that he noticed very little velocity increase and the feel of composite is nowhere near up to par with wood.

Past known sticks he has used in game and tried in practice include:

Nike Bauer One75 Wood Stick (Current)
Nike Bauer One60 Wood Stick
Bauer 6000 Wood Stick
Nike Bauer One90 Composite Stick
Nike Bauer Vapor XXX Lite Composite Stick
Innovative 1100 (MoDo during lockout)
Nike Quest V-12 Wood Stick (Was available for retail only in Europe, looked similar to Nike Quest Apollo)
Nike Quest 1 (Normal paint job)
Sherwood SOP 7000 Wood Stick
Nike Quest 1 (Quest 3 paint job) Wood Stick
Blacked-out Vic Wood Stick
Wood stick painted like a Mission M-1
Vic (model unknown)
Titan (model unknown)

[edit] Personal life

Markus and his wife Lotta have three children, Rebecca, Isabella, and Alex.[1]

[edit] Movements

[edit] Awards

[edit] Records

[edit] Career statistics

    Regular Season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1988-89 Ornskoldsvik SEL-3 14 7 6 13 -- -- -- -- -- --
1989-90 MODO Jr. SEL-2 33 43 35 78 20 -- -- -- -- --
1990-91 MODO SEL 32 10 9 19 14 -- -- -- -- --
1991-92 MODO SEL 39 22 18 40 54 -- -- -- -- --
1992-93 MODO Jr. SEL-2 2 4 1 5 2 -- -- -- -- --
1992-93 MODO SEL 39 22 17 39 67 3 3 2 5 0
1993-94 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 71 4 7 11 27 -- -- -- -- --
1993-94 Cleveland Lumberjacks IHL 5 1 6 7 4 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 14 2 2 4 2 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Cleveland Lumberjacks IHL 7 3 4 7 6 4 1 3 4 8
1995-96 Pittsburgh Penguins NHL 66 19 33 52 36 -- -- -- -- --
1995-96 Vancouver Canucks NHL 10 3 0 3 6 6 1 2 3 8
1996-97 Vancouver Canucks NHL 78 21 20 41 30 -- -- -- -- --
1997-98 Vancouver Canucks NHL 76 14 20 34 56 -- -- -- -- --
1998-99 Vancouver Canucks NHL 80 36 30 66 74 -- -- -- -- --
1999-00 Vancouver Canucks NHL 82 27 38 65 64 -- -- -- -- --
2000-01 Vancouver Canucks NHL 72 41 34 75 58 -- -- -- -- --
2001-02 Vancouver Canucks NHL 81 40 50 90 50 6 1 1 2 2
2002-03 Vancouver Canucks NHL 82 48 56 104 52 14 5 9 14 18
2003-04 Vancouver Canucks NHL 78 35 49 84 58 7 2 7 9 2
2004-05 MODO SEL 13 8 9 17 8 6 0 1 1 10
2005-06 Vancouver Canucks NHL 81 32 47 79 66 -- -- -- -- --
2006-07 Vancouver Canucks NHL 82 24 36 60 54 12 4 1 5 16
NHL Totals 953 346 422 768 633 45 13 20 33 46

[edit] International play

Medal record
Men's ice hockey
World Championships
Bronze 2002 Team
Bronze 1999 Team
Silver 1993 Team

Näslund has played for Sweden in the following competitions:

[edit] International statistics

Year Team Event   GP G A Pts PIM
1992 Sweden WJC 7 8 2 10 12
1993 Sweden WJC 7 13 11 24 33
1993 Sweden WC 8 1 1 2 14
1996 Sweden WC 1 0 0 0 0
1996 Sweden WCup 1 0 0 0 2
1999 Sweden WC 10 6 4 10 16
2002 Sweden Oly 4 2 1 3 0
2002 Sweden WC 3 1 2 3 0
2004 Sweden WCup 4 0 3 3 0
Junior int'l totals 14 21 13 34 45
Senior int'l totals 31 10 11 21 32

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d The Vancouver Canucks - MARKUS NASLUND. canucks.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-17.
  2. ^ Brånfelt, Björn (2000-08-14). Vancouvers superkedja (Swedish). Aftonbladet. Retrieved on 2007-04-22.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Mark Messier
Vancouver Canucks Captains
2000 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Jarome Iginla
Winner of the Lester B. Pearson Award
2003
Succeeded by
Martin St. Louis
Preceded by
Dany Heatley & Joe Sakic
EA Sports NHL Cover Athlete
NHL 2005
Succeeded by
Vincent Lecavalier
da:Markus Näslund

de:Markus Näslund fr:Markus Näslund it:Markus Näslund lv:Markuss Neslunds nl:Markus Näslund pl:Markus Näslund ru:Нэслунд, Маркус simple:Markus Näslund sk:Markus Näslund fi:Markus Näslund sv:Markus Näslund

Views
Personal tools
Navigation
interaction

Toolbox