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Press
Release 2/17/10
Date: 2/11/2010 11:48:57 AM
BY KYLA
SAWYER
Idaho
Junior Steelheads'
left-winger Victor Karlsson had beaten the
two
Valencia Flyers'
defensemen just as
the puck came around the boards. With a flick of the wrist,
Karlsson backhanded a shot over the
Valencia
goalie's shoulder into
the net to score and give Idaho a 2-1
lead over the
Flyers. "It was actually one of the nicest goals I've had
since coming here," Karlsson said after the Junior
Steelheads defeated Valencia, 8-2, on Saturday at Manchester
Ice and Event Centre in McCall.
This is
Karlsson's third season playing hockey "here" in the United
States. Minnesota to Texas, the Stockholm, Sweden native
began his hockey career around age 6 and was 17 years old
when his family supported Karlsson's decision to come to the
U.S., where he played hockey for Cloquet High School in
Minnesota.
"I
always wanted to come to America for the high school
experience and I was lucky enough to play for one of the top
high school hockey teams in the country," he said. Before
becoming an Idaho Junior Steelhead, Karlsson played in the
North American
Hockey League (NAHL)
for the Wichita Falls Wildcats in Texas.
Now 20 years old, the
6-foot-1 import is one of the
Western States Hockey League's
(WSHL)
top 20 players who's about to attain a goal of his own - to
play college hockey. "Victor's had a great year, and he's
got the well-deserved attention from schools; he's going to
be a good college hockey player,"
Junior
Steelheads
head coach John Olver said. "Victor's had some
NCAA Division
III
schools make him some offers, so right now he's in the
process of trying to decide where he's going to go," Olver
said. McCall Mountaineers hockey player Christian Widen and
his family billet Karlsson when Idaho plays in McCall.
Smart on the
Ice, Widen, a McCall resident who also hails from a small
town outside Stockholm, says he's impressed with Karlsson's
maturity and intelligence on the ice. "He makes decisions
that are good for the team, and he's mature in the sense
that he doesn't have a big head about his own game," Widen
said. Karlsson also is has strong puck-handling skills,
which is unusual for someone of his size, Widen said.
Karlsson brings a lot of finesse with his game, Olver said.
"Along the boards and in the corner, he just always seems to
come up with the puck - always," Olver said. Many Swedish
hockey players stay home and work their way up the European
leagues before moving on to the NHL, but Karlsson's personal
goals are clear. "I want to go to college, play hockey and
do well, and then after that, maybe play pro somewhere in
Europe," he said. Until then, he's content to stay in the
U.S. "I don't regret anything - I've come here and I love
it," Karlsson said.
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