Felizia Wikner-Zienkiewicz

Swedish ice hockey player

Ice hockey player
Felizia Wikner-Zienkiewicz
Born (1999-09-17) 17 September 1999 (age 24)
Kungsbacka, Sweden
Height 165 cm (5 ft 5 in)
Weight 52 kg (115 lb; 8 st 3 lb)
Position Left Wing
Shoots Left
SDHL team
Former teams
Frölunda HC
  • Brynäs IF
  • HV71
  • MODO Hockey
National team  Sweden
Playing career 2015–present

Elin Felizia Wikner-Zienkiewicz (born 17 September 1999) is a Swedish ice hockey player for Frölunda HC of the Swedish Women's Hockey League (SDHL) and member of the Swedish national team. She has represented Sweden at the Winter Olympic Games and IIHF Women's World Championship.

Playing career

Wikner-Zienkiewicz was introduced to ice hockey via her older brothers, Johannes (born 1990) and Kristoffer (born 1993), who both played throughout her childhood. At age five, she began playing with the minor ice hockey department of Hanhals IF in her hometown of Kungsbacka on the western coast of Sweden.[1] Though Hanhals IF had a team that was active in the women's Division 1, Wikner-Zienkiewicz was the only girl on the teams for her age group; the club also had a secondary women’s team, and she was able to practice with that team in addition to playing with boys of her age.[2]

When Hanhals IF dissolved its women’s team after the 2009–10 Riksserien season, Wikner-Zienkiewicz opted to move to Hovås HC, based in Hovås [sv], Gothenburg Municipality, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Kungsbacka. The move was motivated by a desire continue playing with a women’s team and to also play on teams with both boys and girls of her age. She was the only girl in the group of players born in 1999, however Hovås HC had a number of girls who were nearly her age in the groups for players born in 2000 and 2001, including goaltender Anna Amholt, and she played on teams with them.[2] Her Division I debut was made with the Hovås women's representative team in the 2012–13 season and she tallied 3 goals for 3 points in nine games while continuing to spend most of her time playing with teams in the minor department. In 2014–15, she split her time between the women's representative team and the Hovås under-16 team in the U16 Division 1, the second-tier national boys' under-16 league.[3]

Wikner-Zienkiewicz was admitted to the NIU hockeygymnasium[a] of Örnsköldsvik Gymnasium and MODO Hockey in Örnsköldsvik, which has a reputation for developing elite players and a list of alumni including icons of Swedish ice hockey Peter Forsberg, Victor Hedman, Maria Lindh, Emma Nordin, and Daniel and Henrik Sedin.[1][7][8] Though Örnsköldsvik is situated in the north-central historical province of Ångermanland on the east coast of Sweden and is quite far from Kungsbacka, Wikner-Zienkiewicz selected MODO hockeygymnasiet because she had a number of relatives in nearby Umeå and Kramfors.[2]

  1. ^ A hockeygymnasium is a collaborative program created by a gymnasieskola and an elite ice hockey club that allows students to focus on developing their ice hockey abilities while completing their secondary education.[4] The highest level of hockeygymnasiet designation is Nationellt Idrottsutbildning (lit.'National Sports Education') or NIU. NIU hockeygymnasier are certified by the Swedish Ice Hockey Association as meeting requirements necessary to consistently produce players who, at a minimum, reach the elite senior national level.[5] NIU programs are limited to 12–14 students per year, who are selected on the basis of grades and ice hockey ability.[6]

MODO Hockey

Wikner-Zienkiewicz made her debut in the Riksserien (rebranded as SDHL in 2016) playing with MODO Hockey during the 2015–16 season, her first year at the hockeygymnasium. Her rookie season in the elite league did not culminate in any points, however, she skated in 25 games, the youngest player to play such a volume that season, and gained valuable experience playing alongside future senior national team teammates Ebba Berglund, Olivia Carlsson, Johanna Olofsson, Celine Tedenby, and Agnes Åker. As would continue throughout her time with MODO, she also played a limited number of games with MODO's secondary team in the Damettan (called Division 1 during 2007–2015; reconfigured as NDHL in 2021) and with the club's junior teams.[3]

She scored her first SDHL goal in the 2016–17 season and finished the season with 3 goals for 3 points in 32 games.[3] MODO signed several import players for the 2017–18 season and she had the opportunity to play with international players Ivana Bilic, Michela Cava, Jenelle Kohanchuk, Viktorie Švejdová, and Kaitlyn Tougas, in addition to future Swedish Olympic national team teammates Paula Bergström, Emma Söderberg, and Mina Waxin. Her first assist was recorded in the 2017–18 season and she ranked tenth on the team for points, with 4 goals and 9 assists for 13 points in 36 games.[9]

HV71

Upon completion of her secondary school studies in Örnsköldsvik, Wikner-Zienkiewicz sought to push her development further in a new environment and signed with HV71 in Jönköping.[2] She slotted into the middle six during her first three seasons with HV71, as the roster was packed with elite talent that variously included Olympians Sanni Hakala, Rosa Lindstedt, Michelle Löwenhielm, Hanna Olsson, Fanny Rask, and Riikka Sallinen, among others, and North American import players Jess Healey, Claudia Kepler, Kennedy Marchment, Sidney Morin, Danielle Stone, and Kaitlyn Tougas, among others. She found moderate success while playing lower in the lineup, posting point totals of 17, 17, and 13, respectively across the three seasons.[3]

She had a breakout season in 2021–22, recording 20 goals and 12 assists while playing on HV71's top line alongside Sarah Bujold and Hanna Olsson.[10] In the playoffs, she led the team in scoring, with 3 goals and 4 points, and scored HV71's only goal in the three-game semifinal series against Brynäs IF, as the team fell short of the championship finals.[11]

Brynäs IF

She declined an extension with HV71 following her breakout season, though HV71 general manager Jenni Asserholt made it clear that Wikner-Zienkiewicz was a player the club would have liked to retain.[12][13] She received an offer from the newly established Frölunda HC, which was poised to play its inagural season in the Nationella Damhockeyligan (NDHL). There was some expectation that she would sign with the Gothenburg-based team due to its proximity to her hometown – Kungsbacka is part of Metropolitan Gothenburg – but she decided against signing with Frölunda HC because she felt that the NDHL would not offer the same opportunity for development as the SDHL.[14]

Wikner-Zienkiewicz and Brynäs IF general manager Erika Grahm ultimately agreed to a one-plus-one contract in late-April 2022. In the press release announcing the signing, Grahm, a former MODO teammate of Wikner-Zienkiewicz's, described her as "an offensively skilled player with a great goal-scoring sense."[10][11] Wikner-Zienkiewicz was seen as a replacement for Josefin Bouveng, who had left Brynäs IF to play college ice hockey in the United States.[15]

Frölunda HC

After one season with Brynäs IF, Wikner-Zienkiewicz signed with Frölunda HC, who had achieved promotion to the SDHL at the end of the 2022–23 season. Regarding the signing, Wikner-Zienkiewicz enthused, "I have always wanted to represent Frölunda. I grew up in Kungsbacka and Frölunda has always been the team I cheered for... [the team's] goal is to take Swedish Championship gold as soon as possible and I feel that I want to be a part of that."[16]

Personal life

Her surname 'Zienkiewicz' comes from her paternal grandfather, who is Polish. Her paternal grandmother is Swedish, making her father half-Polish, half-Swedish.[2]

Wikner-Zienkiewicz's second-eldest brother, Kristoffer Wikner Sundborg, played a short career as a winger in the Elitserien with Frölunda HC during 2011 to 2013 and was active in the HockeyAllsvenskan and Hockeyettan until complications with a concussion led him to retire from professional play in 2018.[2]

She graduated with a bachelor's degree from the Prosthetics and Orthotics Program of the School of Health and Welfare at Jönköping University in 2022.[17][18]

During the ice hockey offseason, Wikner-Zienkiewicz participates in orienteering competitions at the open class level.[19]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
2012–13 Hovås Div.1 9 3 0 3 0
2014–15 Hovås U16 U16 Div.1 15 0 2 2 0
2014–15 Hovås Div.1 11 4 5 9 2
2015–16 MODO Riksserien 25 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0
2015–16 MODO 2 Damettan 2 0 2 2 0
2016–17 MODO SDHL 32 3 0 3 4 2 1 0 1 0
2016–17 MODO 2 Damettan 1 0 0 0 0
2017–18 MODO SDHL 36 4 9 13 6 5 0 0 0 0
2017–18 MODO 2 Damettan 6 3 1 4 0
2018–19 HV71 SDHL 36 11 6 17 0 7 0 2 2 0
2019–20 HV71 SDHL 36 7 10 17 8 6 1 3 4 0
2020–21 HV71 SDHL 36 8 5 13 6 5 0 0 0 0
2021–22 HV71 SDHL 34 20 12 32 4 6 3 1 4 4
2022–23 Brynäs IF SDHL 27 10 11 21 12 8 2 5 7 2
2023–24 Frölunda HC SDHL 36 13 8 21 4 8 3 1 4 0
Riksserien/SDHL totals 298 76 61 137 44 50 10 12 22 6

International

Year Team Event Result   GP G A Pts PIM
2016 Sweden U18 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 6 0 0 0 0
2017 Sweden U18 4th 6 0 0 0 2
2021 Sweden OGQ Q 3 4 1 5 0
2022 Sweden OG 8th 5 1 1 2 4
2022 Sweden WC 7th 6 0 1 1 2
2023 Sweden WC 6th 7 0 0 0 2
2024 Sweden WC 7th 5 2 0 2 0
Junior totals 12 0 0 0 2
Senior totals 23 3 2 5 8

References

  1. ^ a b Karlsson, Ronny (14 April 2023). "Stjärnan från Kungsbacka klar för Frölunda". Norra Halland (in Swedish). Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Rönnkvist, Ronnie (30 July 2019). "Framtidens Damkronor: Felizia Wikner Zienkiewicz". HockeySverige (in Swedish). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d "Player Profile: Felizia Wikner Zienkiewicz". Elite Prospects. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  4. ^ "Utbildning: Certifierade elitishockeygymnasier" (PDF). Svenska Ishockeyförbundet (in Swedish). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  5. ^ "Hockeygymnasium > Elitcertifiering". Svenska Ishockeyförbundet (in Swedish). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  6. ^ "Hitta Hockeygymnasium för Tjejer". HockeyGymnasiet (in Swedish). Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  7. ^ "MODO Hockey Ishockeygymnasiet Örnsköldsvik" (PDF). MoDo Hockey (in Swedish). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  8. ^ "Modo Hockeygymnasium Örnsköldsvik NIU ELIT". HockeyGymnasiet (in Swedish). Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  9. ^ "MODO Hockey 2017-2018 Skater Stats". Elite Prospects. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  10. ^ a b Eld, Simon (29 April 2022). "OS-forwarden klar för Brynäs". HockeySverige (in Swedish). Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  11. ^ a b "OS-forward ansluter till Brynäs - Välkommen Felizia Wikner Zienkiewicz". Brynäs IF (in Swedish). 29 April 2022. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  12. ^ Jansson, Martin (26 April 2022). "OS-forwarden lämnar HV71: "En spelare vi gärna haft kvar"". HockeySverige (in Swedish). Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  13. ^ Petersson, Felix; Rymell, Maria (26 April 2022). "Därför lämnar Wikner-Zienkiewicz HV71 – "Ibland måste man våga gå vidare"" (Radio broadcast). Sveriges Radio (in Swedish). Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  14. ^ Jansson, Martin (21 September 2022). ""Jag tror att jag utvecklas bättre i SDHL"". HockeySverige (in Swedish). Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  15. ^ "Guide inför damhockeyligan". Aftonbladet (in Swedish). 15 September 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  16. ^ Fredriksson, Emilie (13 April 2023). "Ishockey: Felizia Wikner Zienkiewicz klar för Frölunda – mitt under VM". SVT Sport (in Swedish). Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  17. ^ Rusaw, David (May 2022). "Theses presentations of the graduating class of the Prosthetics & Orthotics Program 2022" (PDF). Jönköping University. p. 2. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  18. ^ "JU student competes in Olympics: "A dream come true"". Jönköping University (Press release). 9 February 2022. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  19. ^ Rönnkvist, Ronnie (3 February 2023). "Stjärnan tackar orienteringen: "Jag märker inte då jag blir trött"". HockeySverige (in Swedish). Retrieved 13 January 2024.

External links

  • Biographical information and career statistics from Eliteprospects.com, or Eurohockey.com
  • Felizia Wikner-Zienkiewicz at Olympedia Edit this at Wikidata