Mats Trygg

Mats Trygg (born June 1, 1976) is a Norwegian ice hockey defenceman. He currently plays with the Vålerenga Ishockey of the Norwegian GET-ligaen.

Mats Trygg
Born (1976-06-01) June 1, 1976
Oslo, Norway
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 187 lb (85 kg; 13 st 5 lb)
Position Defence
Shoots Right
GET team
Former teams
Vålerenga Ishockey
Spektrum Flyers
Manglerud Star
Färjestad
Iserlohn Roosters
Kölner Haie
Hamburg Freezers
HV71
Lørenskog IK
National team  Norway
NHL Draft Undrafted
Playing career 1994present

Playing career

He started his senior career with Spektrum Flyers in 1994 and played two seasons before signing with Manglerud Star in 1996. He stayed there for three seasons.

In 1999 he signed with the Swedish Elitserien club Färjestad and won the Swedish Championship with them in 2002. He played there for six seasons, before moving to Germany and the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.

In 2005, he joined his best friend and fellow national team player, Martin Knold, playing for Iserlohn Roosters. He stayed only a single season with the Roosters, before getting signed by Kölner Haie in the same league. After four seasons in Cologne, he moved to Hamburg and the Freezers in 2010.

On January 7, 2014, Trygg was named to Team Norway's official 2014 Winter Olympics roster.[1] During the third period of the game against Canada on February 13, he was injured. While hobbling off the ice, he was struck by a referee who was skating backwards and knocked to the ice, sliding to the boards.

Personal life

His twin brother, Marius Trygg, also plays ice hockey, as well as their younger brother Mathias.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
1994–95 Spektrum Flyers NOR 263148
1995–96 Spektrum Flyers NOR 3124616
1996–97 Manglerud Star NOR 3613112412
1997–98 Manglerud Star NOR 371492335
1998–99 Manglerud Star NOR 4414223614
1999–2000 Färjestad BK SEL 290998 30110
2000–01 Färjestad BK SEL 5010102022 1545916
2001–02 Färjestad BK SEL 409101922 1044839
2002–03 Färjestad BK SEL 505131854 1402210
2003–04 Färjestad BK SEL 491361930 1700020
2004–05 Färjestad BK SEL 4953838 1511210
2005–06 Iserlohn Roosters DEL 5213203382
2006–07 Kölner Haie DEL 527222960 912330
2007–08 Kölner Haie DEL 467202750 1435814
2008–09 Kölner Haie DEL 515192436
2009–10 Kölner Haie DEL 397101742 31124
2010–11 Hamburg Freezers DEL 50281066
2011–12 HV71 SEL 2121318 60112
2012–13 HV71 SEL 5231428 52242
2013–14 Lørenskog IK NOR 387222938 50114
2014–15 Lørenskog IK NOR 405242953 61124
2015–16 Lørenskog IK NOR 443161920 17461012
2016–17 Lørenskog IK NOR 377192618 71342
2017–18 Lørenskog IK NOR 427162328 40004
2018–19 Vålerenga Ishockey NOR 418122034 111678
2019–20 Vålerenga Ishockey NOR 373131620
2020–21 Manglerud Star NOR 21113148
2021–22 Manglerud Star NOR 141454
NOR totals 488 88 186 274 308 50 7 17 24 34
SEL totals 340 47 53 100 220 85 11 16 27 99
DEL totals 290 41 99 140 336 26 5 8 13 48

International

Year Team Event   GP G A Pts PIM
1994 Norway WJC B 70002
1994 Norway EJC 51344
1995 Norway WJC B 71012
1997 Norway WC 81012
1998 Norway WC B 70222
2000 Norway WC 51122
2000 Norway WC 61456
2001 Norway OGQ 32020
2001 Norway WC 50220
2002 Norway WC D1 40442
2003 Norway WC D1 502218
2004 Norway WC D1 51562
2005 Norway OGQ 66282
2005 Norway WC D1 51564
2006 Norway WC 512312
2007 Norway WC 62578
2008 Norway WC 71458
2009 Norway OGQ 30224
2009 Norway WC 61016
2010 Norway OG 40002
2012 Norway WC 851614
2013 Norway WC 71232
2014 Norway OG 30000
2014 Norway WC 72028
2015 Norway WC 70004
2016 Norway WC 701110
Junior totals 19 2 3 5 8
Senior totals 129 26 44 70 118

References

  1. "Austria, Latvia and Norway all unveil 25-man Olympic rosters". www.tsn.ca. Archived from the original on January 10, 2014.


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