Sweden men's national inline hockey team
The Swedish men's national inline hockey team is one of the most successful inline hockey teams in the world. With notable alumni like Henrik Lundqvist the Swedes have won five gold medals as members of the Top Division at the IIHF Inline Hockey World Championships.
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's Inline Hockey | ||
World Championships | ||
![]() | 2002 - Nürnberg | Top Division |
![]() | 2003 - Nürnberg | Top Division |
![]() | 2004 - Bad Tolz | Top Division |
![]() | 2005 - Kuopio | Top Division |
![]() | 2006 - Budapest | Top Division |
![]() | 2007 - Landshut | Top Division |
![]() | 2008 - Bratislava | Top Division |
![]() | 2009 - Ingolstadt | Top Division |
![]() | 2010 - Karlstad | Top Division |
2008 World Championship roster
# | Player | Catches | Height | Weight | D.O.B. | Birthplace | Club | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() |
Dennis Karlsson | L | 1.77 m | 78 kg | Jun. 11, 1987 | Sweden | ![]() |
35 | ![]() |
Kristoffer Martin | L | 1.76 m | 83 kg | Feb. 17, 1979 | Sweden | ![]() |
# | Player | Shoots | Height | Weight | D.O.B. | Birthplace | Club | |
2 | ![]() |
Johan Lilja | L | 1.87 m | 93 kg | May 26, 1980 | Köping, Sweden | ![]() |
7 | ![]() |
Daniel Brolin – C | L | 1.81 m | 88 kg | Jul. 23, 1981 | Sweden | ![]() |
18 | ![]() |
Simon Olsson | L | 1.70 m | 69 kg | Apr. 23, 1989 | Göteborg, Sweden | ![]() |
21 | ![]() |
Anders Torgersson | L | 1.87 m | 87 kg | Feb. 11, 1984 | Sweden | ![]() |
23 | ![]() |
Ludvig Rantanen | R | 1.85 m | 85 kg | Mar. 23, 1988 | Sweden | ![]() |
29 | ![]() |
Andreas Svensson | L | 1.85 m | 85 kg | Apr. 13, 1980 | Karlskrona, Sweden | ![]() |
72 | ![]() |
Martin Thelander | L | 1.83 m | 80 kg | May 15, 1981 | Karlstad, Sweden | ![]() |
# | Player | Shoots | Height | Weight | D.O.B. | Birthplace | Club | |
4 | ![]() |
Dave Lindarv | L | 1.85 m | 85 kg | Jan. 5, 1988 | Sweden | ![]() |
9 | ![]() |
Fredrik Eriksson | L | 1.83 m | 87 kg | Jul. 17, 1983 | Örebro, Sweden | ![]() |
12 | ![]() |
Carl Berglund | L | 1.75 m | 75 kg | Oct. 9, 1989 | Sweden | ![]() |
14 | ![]() |
Dick Axelsson | L | 1.90 m | 84 kg | Apr. 25, 1987 | Sweden | ![]() |
17 | ![]() |
Jonas Karlsson | L | 1.80 m | 80 kg | Feb. 14, 1986 | Sweden | |
20 | ![]() |
Kristian Luukkonen | L | 1.79 m | 81 kg | Nov. 3, 1984 | Sweden | ![]() |
24 | ![]() |
Daniel Wessner | L | 1.84 m | 84 kg | Jan. 22, 1982 | Filipstad, Sweden | ![]() |
26 | ![]() |
Jonas Olsson | L | 1.84 m | 82 kg | Jul. 2, 1985 | Sweden | |
28 | ![]() |
Linus Klasen | L | 1.75 m | 72 kg | Feb. 19, 1986 | Stockholm, Sweden | ![]() |
gollark: I mean, at the very least it's documented in the code, with no comments.
gollark: Yes. This is documented somewhere maybe.
gollark: You just feed it some context, and the question, and then it something something matrix multiplication, and then it does postprocessing to turn the output into a span in the original text, and answers come out.
gollark: It doesn't do training. That would be *unusably* slow.
gollark: However, if I actually had GPUs, I would be able to use bigger, more accurate models, and feed them entire Wikipedia pages.
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