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One of the major influences to HIFK was the NHL veteran and Stanley Cup winner Carl
Brewer. Hired in 1968 as a playing coach, he advocated a North American style of
play which has persisted in HIFK since. Brewer's influence on the way ice hockey is
played in Finland led to his posthumous induction to the Finnish Hockey Hall of
Fame in 2003.
The championship team from 1998 is widely recognized as one of the best ever to
have skated together in the top flight of Finnish ice hockey.[citation needed]
Players on the 1998 championship team included a number of future (and former) NHL
players – including Tim Thomas, Jan Čaloun, Johan Davidsson, Bob Halkidis, Olli
Jokinen, Jere Karalahti, Jarno Kultanen, Brian Rafalski, Christian Ruuttu, Jarkko
Ruutu, Kimmo Timonen and Marko Tuomainen.
HIFK's general manager starting from May 1, 2008, is Jukka Valtanen. He is the
successor of Pentti Matikainen, who coached Team Finland to its first hockey
Olympic medal (silver) in Calgary 1988.
Team identity
Logos and jerseys
HIFK uses a shield for their logo, with a four pointed star and text I.F.K. and
year of formation 1897 on it. They wear red, white and blue colored jerseys, and
have worn those colors since their beginnings. For the 1993-94 season, HIFK changed
their logo to a five pointed star with text saying HIFK Hockey on it. Unpopular
with fans, and HIFK wanting to modernize their brand, changed their logo again in
1996 to a red big cat on a blue circle. Commonly referred to as "petologo"
(English: "beast logo") among fans. When the beast logo became HIFK's primary logo
for the 1996-97 season, they reintroduced the original shield logo to become their
jersey's new shoulder patches. For the 2008-09 season, HIFK made their original
shield logo the primary logo once again. It would swap places with the beast logo
on the jerseys, making the beast logo their new shoulder patches until 2017, when
the beast logo was eliminated from the jerseys entirely.
Home arena
Jokerit-HIFK Winter classic match played on Helsinki Olympic Stadium
HIFK play their home games at Helsinki Ice Hall. The stadium opened in 1966, and
seats up to 8 200 spectators. The arena was also used and shared by rival team
Jokerit until 1997, when they moved to the Hartwall Arena. HIFK is well known for
playing classic hard rock music during games in Helsinki Ice Hall.
Taddeo da Suessa
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Taddeo da Suessa (or da Sessa) (c. 1190/1200 – February 18, 1248) was an Italian
jurist.
Taddeo taking leave of the council of Lyon holds a sign that reads Dies ista, dies
irae ('This day is a day of wrath'). From a 13th-century copy of the Chronica
maiora.[1]
Taddeo and Pier were ambassadors to Pope Gregory IX and, after 1244, to Innocent
IV. In 1245 Taddeo unsuccessfully defended the cause of the excommunicated emperor
at the Council of Lyon against the accusations made against him by Innocent.[2]
According to Matthew of Paris's Chronica maiora, Taddeo responded to the deposition
of the emperor by exclaiming, "from this time, heretics shall sing, the
Khwarezmians shall reign, and the Tartars rise up."[3]
He died at the Battle of Parma, killed during the Guelph assault against the
imperial camp. Taddeo was captured, had his hands cut off, and was thrown into
prison to die shortly later.[4]
References
Suzanne Lewis (1987), The Art of Matthew Paris in the Chronica Majora, University
of California Press, pp. 264–265.
David Abulafia (1995). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 5, C.1198-c.1300.
Cambridge University Press. pp. 140–141. ISBN 978-0-521-36289-4.
Brett Edward Whalen (2019), The Two Powers: The Papacy, the Empire, and the
Struggle for Sovereignty in the Thirteenth Century, University of Pennsylvania
Press, pp. 172–173.
This article about an Italian lawyer, judge or jurist is a stub. You can help
Wikipedia by expanding it.
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Marta Cantón
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She competed for Spain in the rhythmic gymnastics all-around competition at the
1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. She tied for third place in the qualification,
advanced to the final and ended up in sixth place overall.[1]
References
Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Marta
Cantón". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the
original on 2020-04-18.
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