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Sigfrid Öberg

Swedish ice hockey player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sigfrid Öberg
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Sigfrid "Sigge" Öberg (22 February 1907 – 2 April 1949) was a Swedish ice hockey, football and bandy player, known for representing Hammarby IF in all three sports.

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He won a silver medal with the Swedish national hockey team at the 1928 Winter Olympics and four domestic league titles with Hammarby.[1][2]

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Athletic career

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Ice hockey

In 1926, at age 18, Öberg made his debut for Hammarby IF in Elitserien, Sweden's top tier.[3] He would go on to form a feared forward line with Helge Johansson and Erik Larsson in the upcoming years.[4][5]

Öberg won four Swedish championships – in 1932, 1933, 1936 and 1937 – with the club,[6] their first domestic titles.[7]

He was known as a physical right winger and a particularly skilled skater,[8] who possessed a great shooting ability and stickhandling.[9]

Öberg won 25 competitive caps for the Swedish national team, scoring a total of 6 goals, and represented his country at several major tournaments; the biggest achievement was winning the silver medal in the 1928 Winter Olympics.[8] Öberg is a recipient of the honorary award Stora Grabbars Märke and was inducted into the Swedish Hockey Hall of Fame in 2012; both awards are handed out by the Swedish Ice Hockey Association.[10]

He retired from ice hockey in 1939.[11]

Football

Öberg also played football with Hammarby IF and made his debut for the senior team in 1926, at age 18.[3]

Up until his retirement from the sport in 1935, Öberg made 124 league appearances for Hammarby in the Swedish second tier Division 2, scoring 54 goals playing as a forward.[12]

Bandy

Öberg was also a prominent bandy player for Hammarby IF between 1925 and 1939. He was a member of the Swedish national team and won a total of five caps for his country.[9] As well as in ice hockey, Öberg was a recipient of the honorary award Stora Grabbars Märke in bandy, an award that is handed out by the Swedish Bandy Association.[13]

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Personal life

He grew up in a working-class home in a southern part of Stockholm known as Södermalm, where he lived his whole life. On 2 April 1949, Öberg died by drowning in the waterway Hammarbyleden, at the age of 42.[9]

References

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