Sunday, April 13, 2008

Who is Fabian Brunnstrom?



Vancouver fans may come to know this name in the near future. He's now being hyped as a potential Saviour to the stagnant Canuck offense. Hmmm... another Swede eh? Seems to be the only region we know how to draft from.


The Canucks are reportedly close to signing the 23-year-old unrestricted free agent winger to a multi-year contract.

The undrafted Brunnstrom had 37 points [9-28] this season with Farjestads BK Karlstad of the Swedish Elite League and the promise of top-six ice time - plus an opportunity to perhaps play alongside countrymen Henrik and Daniel Sedin - helped woo the winger to the West Coast.


Nobody really knows who he is. I did a little bit of digging and this is what I was able to find.

Elite Prospects had the following:

An offensively gifted forward with a decent scoring touch. Brunnström is a speedy skater with soft hands and good technical skills. Combines speed and stickhandling in an impressive way. Hockey sense is pretty good and he is also strong physically with a good attitude.






The Hockey News ran an article on him. Fabian Brunnstrom, the next Daniel Alfredsson?

Brunnstrom, a 6-foot-1, 195-pound forward, is a classic late bloomer. Last season he was playing First Division in Sweden, which is two steps under the Elite League and was a star at that level, which prompted Farjestad to sign him this season. He skates very well and his three goals and 13 points in 21 games are probably not a clear indication of how good he is offensively.

One scout said it's doubtful Brunnstrom could step in and play on an NHL team's top two lines right now, but he is seen as a good prospect with a lot of upside. And remember, there are a number of hockey executives who still wake up in a cold sweat over not paying more attention to Alfredsson, who was drafted 133rd overall by the Ottawa Senators as a 21-year-old in 1994.

"He's coming pretty much from nowhere," said Farjestad GM Hakan Loob. "Mentally, he has grown strong in the past year, but he has the potential to become mentally stronger. He looks like he has been in the Elite League for a couple of years the way he moves the puck and skates and everything like that."

Oooooohhh... a Hakan Loob quote. Here's a piece of Hockey trivia for you... Loob was the last Swedish player to score 50 goals in the NHL.

So word is he wants to play on as a top-six forward and only on a select few teams. Seems like we have the spot available at top-six and well with half the team being Swedish it might be a good fit. If he's got skill he could play with the Sedin's or maybe even start another scoring line with Mason Raymond and somebody who can play between the two of them.

Well time will tell if this is a diamond in the rough or a flop. At least Nonis is trying. Maybe we'll change the cheer from GO-CANUCKS-GO to LETS GO SWEDEN! Maybe we can get Mats too...

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