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Bengt-Åke Gustafsson

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Position Center
Shoots Left
Nickname Bengt Gustafsson, Gus
Height
Weight
ft 0 in (1.83 m)
198 lb (90 kg)
Nationality Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden
Born March 23, 1958,
Karlskoga, SWE
NHL Draft 55th overall, 1978
Washington Capitals
Pro Career 1977 – 1999

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Olympic medal record
Men's ice hockey
Gold 2006 Turin Team

Bengt-Åke Gustafsson (born March 23 1958 in Karlskoga, Sweden) is a retired Swedish ice hockey player, now head coach of the Swedish national ice hockey team, a post he has held since February 14, 2005. During his American career he was often called Bengt Gustafsson or Gus.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Started his career playing for Bofors IK in the Swedish third tier league and later transferred to Färjestads BK of the Elitserien. Gustafsson was drafted by the Washington Capitals in the fourth round of the 1978 NHL Entry Draft. Gustafsson elected to play the 1978-79 season in his homeland Sweden, but he signed with the WHA's Edmonton Oilers in March 1979. Gustafsson made his North American pro debut in the WHA playoffs that spring, picking up a goal and two assists in two games. When the Oilers merged into the NHL, the Capitals reclaimed Gustafsson's rights from Edmonton. After retiring from the NHL he first returned to Färjestads BK and later spent several years playing in Austria.

[edit] Coaching career

Gustafsson has since his active playing career coached several teams, including two national teams.

He has been reported as a "player's coach", listening to and arguing with his players rather than telling them what to do. In a SVT interview he stated: "[Ice] hockey is played on the ice, not behind the bench. As coach I can point things out to them and make them aware of stuff but they are the ones who play the game. As a player I have to confess that I didn't listen that much to what the coach said, and as a coach I don't expect them to do either."

He was criticised for asking various players whom they would like to see in the team and how they wanted to play and for asking players how they would like to see the lines formed. He then went in and adjusted the lines as the tournaments went on. The criticism has been somewhat subdued after his 2006 Olympic and IIHF WC double.

The Olympic and IIHF team only shared eight players. Most of the stars from Olympics was missing. Only Jörgen Jönsson, Kenny Jönsson, Henrik Zetterberg, Niklas Kronwall, Mikael Samuelsson, Stefan Liv, Ronnie Sundin and Mika Hannula participated in both tournaments.

[edit] Awards

  • Named to the 1977 World Junior Championships All-Star Team.
  • Named to the Swedish All-Star Team in 1983.
  • Named to the Swedish All-Star Team in 1987.
  • Gold medal at the 1987 World Championships.
  • Awarded Guldhjälmen (Swedish Most Valuable Player) in 1990.
  • Gold medal at the 1991 World Championships.
  • Named to the Alpenliga All-Star Team in 1997.
  • EHL winner with VEU Feldkirch in 1998.
  • Five times Austrian champion and threefold Alpenliga champion with VEU Feldkirch.
  • Swedish champion as head coach for Färjestads BK in 2002.
  • Named as Swedish Coach of the Year in 2006.<ref>(Swedish) Bengt-Åke Gustafsson årets coach</ref>
  • Gold medal as head coach at the 2006 Winter Olympics
  • Gold medal as head coach at the 2006 World Championships.

[edit] Records

  • Set a Washington Capitals record (since broken) for points by a rookie with 60 in 1979-80
  • Scored the fastest goal from the start of a period (5 seconds in third period) vs. the Philadelphia Flyers on January 18, 1983
  • First coach in history to win the Olympics and the IIHF World Championship in the same year (2006)

[edit] Notable events

[edit] Career statistics

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1973-74 Bofors IK Swe-3 8 1 4 5 0 6 1 1 2 0
1974-75 Bofors IK Swe-2 18 4 5 9 2 -- -- -- -- --
1975-76 Bofors IK Swe-3 1 7 3 10 -- -- -- -- --
1976-77 Bofors IK Swe-2 22 32 18 50 -- -- -- -- --
1977-78 Färjestads BK Elitserien 32 15 10 25 10 -- -- -- -- --
1978-79 Färjestads BK Elitserien 33 13 11 24 10 3 2 0 2 2
1978-79 Edmonton Oilers WHA -- -- -- -- -- 2 1 2 3 0
1979-80 Washington Capitals NHL 80 22 38 60 17 -- -- -- -- --
1980-81 Washington Capitals NHL 72 21 34 55 26 -- -- -- -- --
1981-82 Washington Capitals NHL 70 26 34 60 40 -- -- -- -- --
1982-83 Washington Capitals NHL 67 22 42 64 16 4 0 1 1 4
1983-84 Washington Capitals NHL 69 32 43 75 16 5 2 3 5 0
1984-85 Washington Capitals NHL 51 14 29 43 8 5 1 3 4 0
1985-86 Washington Capitals NHL 70 23 52 75 26 -- -- -- -- --
1986-87 Bofors IK Swe-2 28 16 26 42 22 -- -- -- -- --
1987-88 Washington Capitals NHL 78 18 36 54 29 -- -- -- -- --
1988-89 Washington Capitals NHL 72 18 51 69 18 4 2 3 5 6
1989-90 Färjestads BK Elitserien 37 22 24 46 14 10 4 10 14 18
1990-91 Färjestads BK Elitserien 37 9 21 30 6 8 3 6 9 2
1991-92 Färjestads BK Elitserien 35 12 20 32 30 6 2 5 7 2
1992-93 Färjestads BK Elitserien 40 17 16 33 32 3 0 1 1 0
1993-94 Feldkirch VEU Austria 54 20 43 63 0 -- -- -- -- --
1994-95 Feldkirch VEU Austria 41 21 42 63 0 -- -- -- -- --
1995-96 Feldkirch VEU Austria 36 20 46 66 14 -- -- -- -- --
1996-97 Feldkirch VEU Alpenliga 41 21 41 62 10 -- -- -- -- --
1996-97 Feldkirch VEU Austria 52 24 54 78 10 -- -- -- -- --
1997-98 Feldkirch VEU EHL 6 2 6 8 2 4 1 3 4 2
1997-98 Feldkirch VEU Austria 46 10 30 40 16 -- -- -- -- --
1998-99 Feldkirch VEU Austria 2 0 0 0 2 -- -- -- -- --
Elitserien totals 214 88 102 190 96 30 11 22 33 18
Austria totals 272 116 256 372 52 -- -- -- -- --
WHA totals -- -- -- -- -- 2 1 2 3 0
NHL totals 629 196 359 555 196 18 5 10 15 10

[edit] International play

Bengt-Åke has played five (1979, 1981, 1983, 1987 and 1991) World Championships with Swedish national team. In both 1987 and 1991 he won the Gold medal.

He also played in the Canada Cup in 1984 and 1987.

In 1992 he represented Sweden in the Olympic Games in Albertville. Fourteen years later he was head coach for the Gold medal winning Swedish team in the Olympics in Torino. In the same year, 2006, he also won gold medal in the Ice Hockey World Championship as head coach.

[edit] Notes

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[edit] External links

[edit] References

fr:Bengt-Åke Gustafsson ru:Густафссон, Бенгт-Оке sk:Bengt-Åke Gustafsson sv:Bengt-Åke Gustafsson

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