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Anna Vanhatalo
Anna Vanhatalo
Position Goaltender
Catches Left
Height
Weight
5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
143 lb (65 kg)
SM-liiga Team Espoo Blues
Born (1984-02-29)February 29, 1984,
Helsinki, Finland
Pro Career 2002 – present
Olympic medal record
Women's ice hockey
Competitor for Flag of Finland Finland
World Championships
Bronze 2011 Switzerland
Winter Olympics
Bronze 2010 Vancouver
Universiade
Silver 2011 Turkey
4 Nations Cup
Bronze 2010 Canada

Anna Vanhatalo (born February 29, 1984) is a Finnish retired ice hockey and ringette player who competed with Finnish national ice hockey team and the Finnish national ringette team.

Ringette career[]

Since 2002, Vanhatalo has played in the professional Finnish ringette league, Ringeten SM-sarja, and been a member of the Finnish national ringette team. She has won two gold medals, one in the World Ringette Championships held in Stockholm in 2004 and the other in the 2007 World Ringette Championships held in Ottawa. She was elected the better goalkeeper of the 2004 world Championship.

In 2006, Vanhatalo went to Canada to play one season for the Montreal Mission team in Canada's National Ringette League. In exchange, her Finnish team Helsinki Ringette gave Claudia Jetté, the Montreal Mission goalkeeper.

Ice hockey career[]

In autumn, 2009, she started playing the goalkeeper position in ice hockey with the women's team of the hockey club Espoo Blues in the SM-liiga of Finland. The performances of Vanhatalo with Espoo Blues and in the Europe Cup to allow her to obtain goalkeeper's post holder with the national team of Finland. She played in the Tournament of 4 nations, in the Vancouver Winter Olympics and in the 2011 World championship in Switzerland.

Vanhatalo play at present for SKIF Nijni Novgorod, a team which evolves in Russia Women'Championship.

Personal life[]

During her stay in Quebec in 2006, she learned the French language. In 2009, she obtained her master's degree of Economics from Helsinki School. The subject of her thesis was the sponsoring for the women's sports. She is multi-lingual and speaks Finnish, Swedish, German, English and French.

Honors[]

References[]

This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Anna Vanhatalo. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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