Erika Holst

Ylva Erika Holst (born 8 April 1979) is a Swedish ice hockey player. She is a member of the Sweden women's national ice hockey team. She won a silver medal at the 2006 Winter Olympics and a bronze medal at the 2002 Winter Olympics.[1]

Erika Holst
Born (1979-04-08) April 8, 1979
Varberg, Sweden
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 159 lb (72 kg; 11 st 5 lb)
Position Centre
Shot Left
Played for Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs
Linhamn BK
M/B Hockey
Segeltorps IK
National team  Sweden
Playing career 19942013

Playing career

Minnesota Duluth

Born in Varberg, Sweden, Holst played for the Minnesota–Duluth Bulldogs women's ice hockey program. She was part of the Bulldogs team that won the first three NCAA women's championships in 2001, 2002 and 2003.[2]

Sweden

She played with the Segeltorps IF in the Riksserien (Sweden league elite). She has represented Sweden in nine Women's World Ice Hockey Championships. In ice hockey at the 2002 Winter Olympics, Holst led the Swedish team with five points in five games. This marked the second Olympics in which she was the team leader in scoring. Four years later, in the win over the United States in the semifinal game in Turin, Holst had one assist.

Personal

Holst came out as lesbian in 2006, along with fellow hockey player Ylva Lindberg.[3]

gollark: It goes via JS, but you don't have to write that so it is irrelevant.
gollark: It's arguably horrible abuse to do this sort of thing for most applications and it produces giant WASM binaries. Although some languages produce less/more idiomatic JS.
gollark: You can, say, write a web frontend in Rust and have the JS/WASM binding bit autogenerated.
gollark: But you don't need to write it manually.
gollark: I'm aware you need bridge code.

References

  1. "Search Results", Olympic Athletes, retrieved 2007-11-05
  2. "HHOF Site Map". Hhof.com. Archived from the original on 2010-12-03. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
  3. "OS-hjältarna: Vi är homosexuella". Aftonbladet. 2006-05-31. Archived from the original on 2007-08-10. Retrieved 2014-01-28.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.