Guldhjälmen (SDHL)
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Guldhjälmen (SDHL)
Summary
Guldhjälmen (SDHL) is a sports award[1].
Key Facts
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) won the Lara Stalder[2].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) won the Kateřina Mrázová[3].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) won the Sydney Brodt[4].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) won the Anna Meixner[5].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) won the Lina Ljungblom[6].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) won the Elisa Holopainen[7].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL) is in the country of Sweden[8].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL)'s instance of is recorded as sports award[9].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL)'s instance of is recorded as Guldhjälmen[10].
- +2020-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Guldhjälmen (SDHL)[11].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL)'s sport is recorded as ice hockey[12].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL)'s competition class is recorded as women's ice hockey[13].
- Guldhjälmen (SDHL)'s event interval is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q577', 'amount': '+1'}[14].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Lara Stalder[2], an ice hockey player[15], b. 1994[16], of Switzerland[17]; Kateřina Mrázová[3], an ice hockey player[18], b. 1992[19], of Czech Republic[20]; Sydney Brodt[4], an ice hockey player[21], b. 1998[22], of United States[23]; Anna Meixner[5], an ice hockey player[24], b. 1994[25], of Austria[26]; Lina Ljungblom[6], an ice hockey player[27], b. 2001[28], of Sweden[29]; and Elisa Holopainen[7], an ice hockey player[30], b. 2001[31], of Finland[32].
FAQs
What awards did Guldhjälmen (SDHL) receive?
Honors received include Lara Stalder[2], Kateřina Mrázová[3], Sydney Brodt[4], and Anna Meixner[5].