Djurgården drew the final series against Modo

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ÖRNSKÖLDSVIK.

The Surströmming derby will take longer.

We’ll have to settle for lip derby.

After stuffing 15 kilos of moose meat (the elk died of its own accord after seeing Skellefteå-Växjö on TV yesterday) from my friend from the dark forests of Skellefteå into the hotel fridge, I walked with Örnsköldsvikfjärden on my back and the sun on my lap through the SHL-survived community – city privileges which they lost seven years ago.

Through Ornparken (it can be as full as Eagle Park in 1.5 weeks), past Johan Södergran’s perfectly parked car in Skolgatan and on to Mamma Mia, the restaurant where young Peter Forsberg ate all the way to the NHL with the help of their slices of beef gratin.

I’ve eaten all the way to Sweden’s most beautiful ice hockey rink, standing a few feet from the dock and so gorgeous on a spring day that Evert Taube could sing about it.

Wild roses, blueflowers, linden flowers and cannonballs in the deck of cards.

Here you will play the very important second match, which is just as important as the first match and the third match, between MoDo and Djurgården.

Setting up the double home game in the Allsvenskan ice hockey playoffs means that the advantage everyone wants swings back and forth like a pendulum on Mora’s clock standing on the bed of a truck in Cairo traffic.

MoDo had a 1-0 and a significant 2-0 chance, and now a new match awaits with new referees, not because the old referees Djurgården thought were “rubbish”, but because it was decided long ago that the other judges would officiate this match.

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At least that was decided by those who decide who should rule, asserted decisively with the obstinacy of a fool.

The start of the match was wary and careless at the same time, tentative and timid, and the only thing that revived it was that Djurgården had to play two games on the box.

Johann Garbinlöf, a recent grumbler, was zoomed onto the big screen and booed by a crowded arena.

Djurgården’s coach showed frustrated body language throughout the game.

He shook his head, shouted, gaped in surprise, rolled his eyes, tried to look speechless, depressed, and every time he appeared on the screens in the square, people booed more.

An older lady in the audience was making a “boo-boo-boo” signal with her fingers, which was very amusing.

Garpenlöv doesn’t quite reach Tomas “Kuben” Andersson’s levels when it comes to hating, but he comes close.

You remember the referee who happened to get Jean-Axel Alavara on him after he tackled goalkeeper Peter Ronqvist at full-back MoDo during the heated play-off against Djurgården in Kempehällen in the spring of 1998.

I’m actually amazed that the home crowd didn’t groan further when Garpenlöv showed up and his imitation, even harder, louder and meaner, still 50 million SEK at stake, as KG Stoppel used to say.

After a goalless first half, Lukas Vejdemo scored 0-1 for Djurgården, MoDo amassed goal-qualifying chances, but the puck, which once walked on the goal line behind a great player “Myran” in the Djurgården box, didn’t want to. Enter.

I found myself thinking “how interesting it would be if a late SHL goalkeeper on loan stepped in again to decide the allsvenskan ice hockey final”.

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The home team led the shot statistic with 25-18, and the shot-to-go statistic at 47-0, after which only David Bernhardt’s goal counted.

The ineffective and slightly boring home team got a lesson in toxic endings when Jonathan Lecrimäki made it 0-2 early in the third period with a shot that sounded like his last name.

There then it felt like it was decided, but MoDo got up, scored 1-2 on a rather cheap return from the Djurgården goalkeeper, equalized when Josh Dickinson’s Petter Hansson fanned a 2-2 with his foot and took the game to extra time.

Once there, Djurgården had a solid game and needed only seven seconds to decide if Daniel Brolin hit an abandoned puck in front of the Godlevskis.

If it had ended differently, Garbinlöf would certainly have opinions about both of them, Dickinson’s tie-puck not the least, but now he never had to make fun of himself and Djurgården again.

Another game in Hovet on Friday, a very important third game before a more important fourth game, and I think the umpires, whether they were the umpires tonight or the ones who couldn’t umpire because they weren’t. Too bad the last time, they will hold their pressure, hotness and the eye is a big one.

very good.

Johann Garbinloff.
Johann Garbinloff.

Plexit’s shot stats: 47-0

After a goalless first half, Lucas Videmo made it 0-1 for Djurgården, MoDo amassed goal-qualifying chances, but the puck, which once went a long way on the goal line behind a great player “Miran” in the Djurgården box, did not. want to enter.

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I found myself thinking “how interesting it would be if a late SHL goalkeeper on loan stepped in again to decide the allsvenskan ice hockey final”.

The home team led the shooting stats with 25-18, and the plexit shot stats with 47-0, after which only David Bernhardt’s finish counted.

The inept and somewhat boring home team got a lesson in toxic endings when Jonathan Lecrimäki made it 0-2 early in the third period with a shot that sounded like his last name.

There then it felt like it was decided, but MoDo got up, scored 1-2 on a rather cheap return from the Djurgården goalkeeper, equalized when Josh Dickinson’s Petter Hansson fanned a 2-2 with his foot and took the game to extra time.

Once there, Djurgården had a solid game and needed only seven seconds to decide if Daniel Brolin hit a left-footed puck in front of the Godlevskis.

If it had ended differently, Garbinlöf would certainly have opinions about both of them, Dickinson’s tie-puck not the least, but now he never had to make fun of himself and Djurgården again.

Another game in Hovett on Friday, a very important third game before a more important fourth game, and I think the umpires, whether they umpire tonight or those who don’t, will stand up to the pressure, the heat and the singles. -Minded very well.

very good.

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