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Frank Fredrickson

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Position
  
Centre

Name
  
Frank Fredrickson

Career end
  
1932

Shot
  
Left

Role
  
Ice hockey player

Weight
  
71 kg

National team
  
Canada

Height
  
1.8 m

Education
  
University of Manitoba

Playing career
  
1913–1932

Career start
  
1913


Frank Fredrickson The Winnipeg Falcons Hockey team Military Biographies


Born
  
June 3, 1895 Winnipeg, MB, CAN (
1895-06-03
)

Played for
  
Detroit Olympics (IHL) Detroit Falcons (NHL) Pittsburgh Pirates (NHL) Boston Bruins (NHL) Detroit Cougars (NHL) Victoria Cougars (WCHL) Victoria Cougars (PCHA) Victoria Aristocrats (PCHA)

Died
  
May 28, 1979, Toronto, Canada

Frank fredrickson timelapse


Sigurður Franklin Fredrickson (June 3, 1895 – May 28, 1979) was a Canadian ice hockey player who was significant to both the amateur and professional sport as it evolved in North America in the early 20th century. Fredrickson's career was interrupted by military service during World War I and prematurely ended by a knee injury in 1931.

Contents

Frank Fredrickson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The Icelandic spelling of his last name is Friðriksson and the alternate English spelling Frederickson.

Frank Fredrickson Fredrickson Frank Honoured Player Legends of Hockey

Frank fredrickson is back


Amateur career

Fredrickson attended Kelvin Technical Institute and Central Collegiate before enrolling at the University of Manitoba law school, where he captained the hockey team. After serving in the 196th Battalion in World War I, he captained the Winnipeg Falcons, to the 1920 Allan Cup and then to the first gold medal offered in the sport at the 1920 Olympics at Antwerp.

Professional career

Frank Fredrickson Frank Fredrickson Wikipedia

Professionally, Fredrickson played for the Victoria Cougars of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association and the Boston Bruins, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Detroit Falcons in the National Hockey League. He helped Victoria win the Stanley Cup in 1925. On December 21, 1928 Fredrickson was traded from the Boston Bruins to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Mickey MacKay. When the Stanley Cup was redone during the 1957–58 NHL season his name was engraved, contrary to NHL rules, on the Cup with the 1929 Bruins. Fredrickson was a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates the day Boston won the Cup. This made him ineligible to be on the cup with Boston.

Fredrickson coached hockey and lacrosse after his retirement. He coached the Pittsburgh Pirates during the 1929–1930 season, when he also played 9 games, but the team went 5-36-3 and moved to Philadelphia the next season before folding. In 1933, Fredrickson was named coach of the Princeton University ice hockey team. Fredrickson was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1958 and is also a member of the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Fredrickson was of Icelandic and Irish heritage.

Regular season and playoffs

  • All statistics taken from NHL.com
  • Awards and achievements

  • Allan Cup championship (1920)
  • Olympic gold medalist (1920)
  • PCHA First All-Star Team (1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924)
  • PCHA Scoring Champion (1923)
  • PCHA Goals Leader (1923)
  • Stanley Cup championships (1925 and 1929)
  • WCHL First All-Star Team (1926)
  • Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1958
  • Selected to Manitoba's All-Century Second All-Star Team
  • Inducted into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum in 1981
  • Honoured Member of the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame
  • References

    Frank Fredrickson Wikipedia