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HOCKEY

Jersey from Sweden’s Lidström makes Bush a Redwing

For the second year in a row, a famous Swede has presented US President George W. Bush with a rather unusual gift.

Jersey from Sweden's Lidström makes Bush a Redwing

During a White House visit by the Stanley Cup champion Detroit Redwings on Tuesday, Swedish hockey star Nicklas Lidström presented Bush with a Redwings jersey emblazoned with Lindström’s number 43.

“‘Thanks, that’s my number’, said Bush when he accepted the gift,” Lidström told the Expressen newspaper.

Bush is the United States’ 43rd president.

The Redwings also presented Bush with a jersey displaying number 41 on the back to be given to Bush’s father, George H.W. Bush, who served as the 41st president of the United States.

Back in May 2007, Swedish prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt presented the US President with a brush cutter during a visit to the White House for talks on climate change and energy policy.

In a thank you letter to Reinfeldt, Bush said the yard tool was “a real beauty”.

Tuesday’s visit marked the second time the Redwings met with President Bush, having previously come to the White House in 2002.

Despite having met Bush one before, and having been to the White House on two other occasions following Redwing Stanley Cup wins in 1997 and 1998, Lidström admitted that meeting the president is always a nerve-wracking event.

“I got a little nervous just before I was supposed to speak,” he said, adding however that he felt Bush “thought it was fun to have us there”.

According to a report in the Detroit Free Press, Lidström indicated that he hoped the Bush family would continue supporting the Redwings even after the president left office.

“When spring comes around and playoff hockey is around the corner again, we’d like the president and his dad to watch us win the Cup again,” the paper reported him as saying.

In addition to Lidström, the championship Redwing team also features Swedes Tomas Holmström, Niklas Kronwall, Andreas Lilja, Henrik Zetterberg, Johahn Franzén and Mikael Samuelsson, all of whom were also on hand for the occasion.

HOCKEY

Sweden’s Rasmus Dahlin first overall pick in NHL draft

Rasmus Dahlin became just the second Swedish-born player to be selected first overall in the NHL draft on Friday when the Buffalo Sabres used the top pick on the rangy teenage defenceman.

Sweden's Rasmus Dahlin first overall pick in NHL draft
Rasmus Dahlin is bound for Buffalo. Photo: Ron Jenkins/Getty Images/AFP
Dahlin, who plays for Frolunda HC in the Swedish league and was widely expected to be the first pick, follows Mats Sundin, who was the top choice of the Quebec Nordiques in 1989.
 
“I just want everything to start,” Dahlin said. “I'm going to bring everything I have to that city. I'm super excited. I can't wait.”
 
Russian forward Andrei Svechnikov went second to the Carolina Hurricanes and the Montreal Canadiens used the third pick to get Finnish centre Jesperi Kotkaniemi.
 
The draft had a decided Europe flavour as four of the top six players were Europeans. The first American was Brady Tkachuk who went to the Ottawa Senators at No. 4 and the Phoenix Coyotes took the first Canadian Barrett Hayton with the fifth pick. 
 
The 18-year-old Dahlin said he was happy to call Buffalo home despite the fact they haven't had a winning season in the past seven seasons and have missed the playoffs eight years in a row.
 
“It's amazing to finally put on the Buffalo Sabres' jersey,” Dahlin said. “I've been there twice. I love that city.”
 
The six-foot-three, 185-pound Dahlin was honoured as the best defenceman at the 2018 world junior championship in Buffalo, registering six assists in seven games. He also played twice for Sweden as a 17-year-old at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.
 
At number six, the Detroit Red Wings chose the brash Halifax Mooseheads winger Filip Zadina who vowed to make teams that passed on him pay down the road.
 
“I'm telling my agent if they will pass on me, I will fill their net with the puck,” the Czech Zadina said. “Yeah, it's just I want to prove to them that they have done a bad decision.”
 
The lone trade of the day came before the draft when the Colorado Avalanche acquired backup goalie Philipp Grubauer and defenceman Brooks Orpik from the Stanley Cup champion Washington Capitals for the 47th pick. The Capitals were willing to get rid of Orpik and Grubauer so they could create salary cap space to sign free agents.