After the other medal frontrunners unveiled their Olympic rosters earlier today, Team Sweden has also formalized the 25 players it’s taking to Milan, Italy, in February. Their full roster can be found below.
Forwards
- RW Jesper Bratt (Devils)
- C Leo Carlsson (Ducks)
- C Joel Eriksson Ek (Wild)
- LW Filip Forsberg (Predators)
- RW Pontus Holmberg (Lightning)
- RW Adrian Kempe (Kings)
- LW Gabriel Landeskog (Avalanche)
- C Elias Lindholm (Bruins)
- RW William Nylander (Maple Leafs)
- C Elias Pettersson (Canucks)
- LW Rickard Rakell (Penguins)
- RW Lucas Raymond (Red Wings)
- C Alexander Wennberg (Sharks)
- C Mika Zibanejad (Rangers)
Defensemen
- D Rasmus Andersson (Flames)
- D Philip Broberg (Blues)
- D Jonas Brodin (Wild)
- D Rasmus Dahlin (Sabres)
- D Oliver Ekman-Larsson (Maple Leafs)
- D Gustav Forsling (Panthers)
- D Victor Hedman (Lightning)
- D Erik Karlsson (Penguins)
Goaltenders
- G Filip Gustavsson (Wild)
- G Jacob Markström (Devils)
- G Jesper Wallstedt (Wild)
Like Canada and the United States, Sweden’s roster is made up entirely of NHLers as the players make their first Olympic appearance since 2014. Headed to do battle with Finland, Slovakia, and the host Italy in Group B, they’re well-positioned as the favorite with one of the tournament’s deeper blue lines and highest-ceiling creases.
In goal, Gustavsson was Sweden’s starter at last year’s 4 Nations Face-Off and is likely ticketed for the No. 1 role again. He’s joined by two new faces, Markström and his teammate Wallstedt, who replace the struggling Samuel Ersson and Linus Ullmark from one year ago. The veteran Markström’s porous .884 SV% in 20 appearances for New Jersey this year indicates the Minnesota tandem, each of whom has saved more than 10 goals above expected (per MoneyPuck), will be leading the way.
Dahlin and Hedman will be the left-side anchors of Sweden’s top four group on defense after being locked in as two of their initial six players over the summer. Every single name on the list is a bona fide top-four piece for their NHL club – something only them, Canada and the US can say – with an appropriate mix of younger talent like the up-and-coming Broberg, while boasting two of the NHL’s best shutdown defenders in Brodin and Forsling. The only player not returning from the 4 Nations group is the Oilers’ Mattias Ekholm. He’s been replaced by Ekman-Larsson and Broberg as the Swedes added an eighth defender as permitted under IIHF rules.
Up front, Nylander will be the centerpiece of Sweden’s offense. The Toronto star has missed some time recently with an injury, but with 41 points in 33 games this season, he leads Swedish NHLers in points per game.
Both their forward and defense groups boast arguably the tournament’s most cohesive two-way identity. They boast multiple veteran, well-regarded all-situations centered like Eriksson Ek and Wennberg – although the latter’s linemate in San Jose, William Eklund, is a glaring omission, while more bottom-six/penalty-kill oriented options like Holmberg find themselves included.
Eklund is a bad decision should be on this team.