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Niclas Wallin
Wallin 2009-04-09 077v1 wiki
Position Defenceman
Shoots Left
Height
Weight
6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
NHL Team Carolina Hurricanes
Born (1975-02-20)February 20, 1975,
Boden, SWE
NHL Draft 97th overall, 2000
Carolina Hurricanes
Pro Career 1996 – present

Niclas Wallin (born February 20, 1975 in Boden, Norrbotten County) is a professional ice hockey player who plays for the NHL's Carolina Hurricanes. His career began in Bodens IK, the hometown team. Having had a breakthrough in the 1995–96 season, he was picked up by the Swedish Elitserien team Brynäs IF. After spending some years with Brynäs IF, Wallin was drafted in the 4th round, 97th overall by the Hurricanes at the 2000 NHL Entry Draft and has remained at the team to this day. During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Wallin returned to his native Sweden playing 39 games for Luleå HF. In 2006, he won his first Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes.

Niclas Wallin is known to many Hurricanes fans as "The Secret Weapon" due to his timing with postseason goals. He has only scored three of them, but they have all come in overtime, including one in Montreal in 2002 and game 2 of the 2006 postseason series against the New Jersey Devils.

He scored in his own net once during a delayed penalty.

Career statistics[]

    Regular season   Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1996–97 Brynäs IF SEL 47 1 1 2 16
1997–98 Brynäs IF SEL 46 2 4 6 95
1998–99 Brynäs IF SEL 46 2 4 6 52 14 0 0 0 8
1999–00 Brynäs IF SEL 48 7 9 16 73
2000–01 Cincinnati Cyclones IHL 8 1 2 3 4 3 0 0 0 2
2000–01 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 37 2 3 5 21 3 0 0 0 2
2001–02 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 52 1 2 3 36 23 2 1 3 12
2002–03 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 77 2 8 10 71
2003–04 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 57 3 7 10 51
2004–05 Luleå HF SEL 39 6 7 13 89 3 0 1 1 6
2005–06 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 50 4 4 8 42 25 1 4 5 14
2006–07 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 67 2 8 10 48
2007–08 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 66 2 6 8 54
2008–09 Carolina Hurricanes NHL 64 2 8 10 42 18 0 0 0 4
NHL totals 470 18 46 64 365 69 3 5 8 32

External links[]



This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Niclas Wallin. 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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