| Kiekko-Espoo | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Nickname | Kivikova | 
| City | Espoo, Finland | 
| League | Mestis | 
| Founded | 1984 | 
| Home arena | Espoo Metro Areena (capacity: 6,982) | 
| Colours | |
| Head coach | Tomas Westerlund | 
| Affiliates | Hunters Jäähonka | 
| Franchise history | |
| 1984–1998 | Kiekko-Espoo | 
| 1998–2016 | Espoo Blues | 
| 2018–present | Kiekko-Espoo | 
| Championships | |
| Mestis | 1: 2022–23 | 
Kiekko-Espoo is a Finnish professional ice hockey club founded in 2018 as a continuation of the Kiekko-Espoo team originally founded in 1984. Kiekko-Espoo men's team plays in the Mestis, where they have won one championship (2022–23), and the women's team plays in the Naisten Liiga. Kiekko-Espoo's junior teams play at national league levels in U16, U18 and U20 juniors.[1] The junior teams of Espoo Blues and Kiekko-Espoo played under Kiekko-Espoo Juniorit ry until 2014.[2]
In 2017, Espoon Kiekkoseura and Espoon Palloseura, which split from the Espoo Blues junior organization, launched their own junior representative team and founded Kiekko-Espoo ry.[3] The team plays in U16, U18 and U20 junior leagues under the name Kiekko-Espoo. When Espoo United collapsed in the spring of 2018, the organization decided to also establish a representative team for adults in Kiekko-Espoo. It started playing in the 2018–2019 season in the Suomi-sarja. In the 2019–2020 season, the Blues women's representative team also moved to Kiekko-Espoo.[4]
History
Establishment and first seasons
The club was established in February 1984 as Kiekko-Espoo and played their first season in 1984–85 in the Finnish Second Division. In 1988, they achieved promotion to the Finnish First Division and in 1992, they celebrated their promotion to the SM-liiga by beating Joensuun Kiekkopojat with a 3–2 series win in a best-of-five format. Tero Lehterä scored the winning goal and Jere Lehtinen assisted.
Kiekko-Espoo ended its first two seasons in SM-liiga in 11th place out of 12 teams. In the 1994–95 season, the team made the playoffs for the first time, losing to Lukko in quarter-finals. In 1997–98, Kiekko-Espoo caused a huge upset by beating regular season winner TPS in the quarter-finals. Kiekko-Espoo ended the season in fourth place.
Name change and rebrand

The following summer, the team name was changed to Espoo Blues. The name came from the dominant colour of their home jersey.
During the 1998–99 season, the team moved to its current home, LänsiAuto Areena (renamed in 2009 to Barona Areena due to sponsorship change). The first seasons in their new home were difficult despite the team signing many big names. The Blues missed the playoffs in 2001 and 2005. In 2002–03, the Blues had their best regular season, finishing in fourth place, only to lose against eventual champion Tappara in overtime of the seventh quarter-final.
The team took a step forward in 2006–07 when they reached the semi-finals for the first time, although they lost against Kärpät in three straight games, and lost the bronze medal game against HPK. During the 2007–08 season, the Blues set a new team record by winning 12 games in a row. They finally ended the regular season in second place and beat local rivals HIFK in the quarter-finals and other local rivals Jokerit in the semi-finals, proceeding to the finals and thus ensuring their first medal ever. The team eventually ended up second after losing in the finals to Kärpät.
In the next season, the team was again second after the regular season, but lost against Kärpät in the semi-finals, as well as the bronze medal game against KalPa. The season also included participation in the Champions Hockey League, where the Blues lost in the semi-finals against eventual champion ZSC Lions of Switzerland. The 2009–10 season was difficult for the team, and the Blues failed to reach the quarter-finals. In 2010–11, the team ended the regular season in ninth place and then beat eighth-placed Kärpät in the wild card round of the playoffs. The team then made history by becoming the first team in the SM-liiga to advance from the wild card round to the semi-finals, eventually beating Ässät in six games. In the semi-finals, the Blues continued their string of upsets and beat regular season winners JYP in five games. In the finals, HIFK swept the series in four games, and the Blues were awarded the silver medal for the second time in team history.
In the 2011–12 season, the Blues finished eighth in the regular season. After beating Lukko in the wild card round, the team faced KalPa in the quarter-finals. The Blues made history again, becoming the first team in SM-liiga history to win the series after being down 0–3. In the semi-finals, the Pelicans beat the Blues 4–1.
After declining ticket income and increasing expenses after a reacquisition by Jääkiekko Espoo Oy in 2012, the Blues were declared bankrupt in March 2016. Their final ranking in the 2015–2016 season was 15th, the lowest in the league.
Continuing the legacy
After the collapse of the Espoo Blues and Espoo United, Kiekko-Espoo was established in 2018. The new Kiekko-Espoo played its first season in Suomi-sarja[5] from where it got promoted to Mestis.
Kiekko-Espoo made it to the Mestis finals in the 2021–22 season but lost to Imatran Ketterä in 5 games.[6] The team made to the Metis finals again in the 2022–23, this time defeating Imatran Ketterä to become champions. Kiekko-Espoo will try to enter SM-liiga in the 2024–2025 season,[7] and applied for the license on the 30th of October 2023.[8]
Home arena

Kiekko-Espoo plays their home games in the 1999 built Espoo Metro Areena located in the Tapiola sporting park in Espoo. The arena has a capacity of 6,982.
Honours
Mestis
 Winner (1): 2022–23
 Winner (1): 2022–23 
Finnish Cup
 Winner (1): 2022
 Winner (1): 2022  Runner-up (1): 2021
 Runner-up (1): 2021
Liiga
The 2018 established Kiekko-Espoo does not claim any achievements before the year 2018.
 Aaro Kivilinna Memorial Trophy (7): 2007, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
 Aaro Kivilinna Memorial Trophy (7): 2007, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
 Kanada-malja: Finnish championship (2): 2008, 2011
 Kanada-malja: Finnish championship (2): 2008, 2011
Junior champions
- A-juniors (20-year-olds) (4): 1989, 1990, 2009, 2014
- B-juniors (18-year-olds) (3): 1988, 1993, 2011
- C-juniors (16-year-olds) (3): 2011, 2012, 2014
Players
Honored members
List of retired numbers:
| No. | Player | Position | Tenure | Date of retirement | References | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | Jere Lehtinen | LW | 1990–1993 | 30th September 2014 | [10] | 
| 33 | Timo Hirvonen | LW | 1990–2003 2005–2006 (player) 2011–2015 (coach) | 6th March 2007 | [11] | 
Notable alumni

 Peter Ahola Peter Ahola
 Tyler Arnason Tyler Arnason
.svg.png.webp) Frank Banham Frank Banham
 Timo Blomqvist Timo Blomqvist
.svg.png.webp) Scott Brower Scott Brower
 Bernd Brückler Bernd Brückler
 Jan Čaloun Jan Čaloun
 Mariusz Czerkawski Mariusz Czerkawski
 Johan Davidsson Johan Davidsson
.svg.png.webp) Tom Draper Tom Draper
 Ben Eaves Ben Eaves
 Nils Ekman Nils Ekman
 Joakim Eriksson Joakim Eriksson
 Kari Haakana Kari Haakana
 Niklas Hagman Niklas Hagman
 Santeri Heiskanen Santeri Heiskanen
 Timo Hirvonen Timo Hirvonen
 Juha Ikonen Juha Ikonen
 Otakar Janecký Otakar Janecký
 Joonas Jääskeläinen Joonas Jääskeläinen
 Jere Karalahti Jere Karalahti
.svg.png.webp) Martin Kariya Martin Kariya
.svg.png.webp) Steve Kariya Steve Kariya
.svg.png.webp) Ryan Keller Ryan Keller
 Ladislav Kohn Ladislav Kohn
.svg.png.webp) Krys Kolanos Krys Kolanos
 Ľubomír Kolník Ľubomír Kolník
 Arto Kuki Arto Kuki
 Arto Laatikainen Arto Laatikainen
 Jani Lajunen Jani Lajunen
 Tero Lehterä Tero Lehterä
 Jere Lehtinen Jere Lehtinen
 Jan Långbacka Jan Långbacka
 Mikko Lehtonen Mikko Lehtonen
.svg.png.webp) Donald MacLean Donald MacLean
 Ryan Malone Ryan Malone
.svg.png.webp) Kent Manderville Kent Manderville
 Shawn McEachern Shawn McEachern
.svg.png.webp) Kurtis McLean Kurtis McLean
.svg.png.webp) Dale McTavish Dale McTavish
 Branislav Mezei Branislav Mezei
.svg.png.webp) Cory Murphy Cory Murphy
 Jarmo Myllys Jarmo Myllys
 Sami Nuutinen Sami Nuutinen
 / / Stefan Öhman Stefan Öhman
 Oskar Osala Oskar Osala
 Antti Pihlström Antti Pihlström
 Esa Pirnes Esa Pirnes
 Sergei Pryakhin Sergei Pryakhin
 Erkki Rajamäki Erkki Rajamäki
.svg.png.webp) Mike Ribeiro Mike Ribeiro
.svg.png.webp) Nathan Robinson Nathan Robinson
 Christian Ruuttu Christian Ruuttu
 Ilkka Sinisalo Ilkka Sinisalo
 Petri Skriko Petri Skriko
 Iiro Tarkki Iiro Tarkki
 Petr Ton Petr Ton
 Lauri Tukonen Lauri Tukonen
 Antti Törmänen Antti Törmänen
 Jiří Vykoukal Jiří Vykoukal
 Landon Wilson Landon Wilson
 Juha Ylönen Juha Ylönen
Captains history


As Kiekko-Espoo (1984–1998)
 Jan Långbacka (1992–1994) Jan Långbacka (1992–1994)
 Hannu Järvenpää (1994) Hannu Järvenpää (1994)
 Peter Ahola (1994–1995) Peter Ahola (1994–1995)
 Jarmo Muukkonen (fi) (1995–1996) Jarmo Muukkonen (fi) (1995–1996)
 Teemu Sillanpää (1996–1997) Teemu Sillanpää (1996–1997)
 Juha Ikonen (1997–1998) Juha Ikonen (1997–1998)
As Espoo Blues
 Juha Ikonen (1998–1999) Juha Ikonen (1998–1999)
 Peter Ahola (1999–2001) Peter Ahola (1999–2001)
 Valeri Krykov (fi) (2001–2002) Valeri Krykov (fi) (2001–2002)
 Juha Ylönen (2002–2003) Juha Ylönen (2002–2003)
 Rami Alanko (2003–2005) Rami Alanko (2003–2005)
 Timo Hirvonen (2005, stepped down as captain in November 2005) Timo Hirvonen (2005, stepped down as captain in November 2005)
 Markku Hurme (fi) (2005–2006, replaced Hirvonen as captain mid-season) Markku Hurme (fi) (2005–2006, replaced Hirvonen as captain mid-season)
 Joakim Eriksson (2006) Joakim Eriksson (2006)
 Markku Hurme, Markku Hurme, Ville Viitaluoma, Ville Viitaluoma, Erkki Rajamäki, Erkki Rajamäki,.svg.png.webp) Kent Manderville (2006–2007, rotating captaincy) Kent Manderville (2006–2007, rotating captaincy)
 Rami Alanko (2007–2009) Rami Alanko (2007–2009)
 Toni Kähkönen (2009–2012) Toni Kähkönen (2009–2012)
 Arto Laatikainen (2012–2013) Arto Laatikainen (2012–2013)
 Kim Hirschovits (2013–2016) Kim Hirschovits (2013–2016)
As Kiekko-Espoo
 Nikke Kettukangas (2018–2019) Nikke Kettukangas (2018–2019)
 Juuso Hämäläinen (2019–2020) Juuso Hämäläinen (2019–2020)
 Arto Laatikainen (2020–2021) Arto Laatikainen (2020–2021)
 Toni Kähkönen (2021–2022) Toni Kähkönen (2021–2022)
 Miro Keskitalo (2022–2023) Miro Keskitalo (2022–2023)
Head coaches
As Kiekko-Espoo (1984–1998)
 Martti Merra (1992–1994, replaced in January) Martti Merra (1992–1994, replaced in January)
 Hannu Saintula (fi) (1994, mid-season replacement) Hannu Saintula (fi) (1994, mid-season replacement)
 Harri Rindell (1994–1996) Harri Rindell (1994–1996)
 Håkan Nygren (sv) (1996–1998, replaced in February) Håkan Nygren (sv) (1996–1998, replaced in February)
 Hannu Saintula (1998, mid-season replacement) Hannu Saintula (1998, mid-season replacement)
As Espoo Blues
 Pekka Rautakallio (1998, replaced in November) Pekka Rautakallio (1998, replaced in November)
 Hannu Saintula (1998–1999, mid-season replacement) Hannu Saintula (1998–1999, mid-season replacement)
 Jukka Holtari (fi) (1999–2000, replaced in January) Jukka Holtari (fi) (1999–2000, replaced in January)
 Jari Härkälä (fi) (2000, mid-season replacement) Jari Härkälä (fi) (2000, mid-season replacement)
 Timo Tuomi (2000–2001, replaced in September of second season) Timo Tuomi (2000–2001, replaced in September of second season)
 Hannu Kapanen (2001–2003, mid-season replacement, continued in the next season) Hannu Kapanen (2001–2003, mid-season replacement, continued in the next season)
 Ted Sator (2003, replaced in October) Ted Sator (2003, replaced in October)
 Hannu Virta (2003–2004, mid-season replacement, replaced in the October of second season) Hannu Virta (2003–2004, mid-season replacement, replaced in the October of second season)
 Pekka Rautakallio (2004–2005) Pekka Rautakallio (2004–2005)
 Kari Heikkilä (2005–2007) Kari Heikkilä (2005–2007)
 Petri Matikainen (2007–2011) Petri Matikainen (2007–2011)
 Lauri Marjamäki (2011–2013, replaced in February) Lauri Marjamäki (2011–2013, replaced in February)
 Mikko Saarinen (fi) (2013, mid-season replacement) Mikko Saarinen (fi) (2013, mid-season replacement)
 Jyrki Aho (2013–2016) Jyrki Aho (2013–2016)
As Kiekko-Espoo
 Mikko Juutilainen (2018–2019) Mikko Juutilainen (2018–2019)
 Kim Hirschovits (2019–2020) Kim Hirschovits (2019–2020)
 Janne Tuunanen (2020–2021) Janne Tuunanen (2020–2021)
 Kim Hirschovits (2021–2022) Kim Hirschovits (2021–2022)
 Tomas Westerlund (2022–2023) Tomas Westerlund (2022–2023)
Logo history
 Logo used by Kiekko-Espoo 1984–98 Logo used by Kiekko-Espoo 1984–98
 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 1998–03 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 1998–03
 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 2003–05 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 2003–05
 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 2005–09 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 2005–09
 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 2009–16 Logo used by the Espoo Blues 2009–16
References
- ↑ "Kiekko-Espoo seuran esittely".
- ↑ "YTJ - Yritys- ja yhteisötietojärjestelmä - Yrityshaku". tietopalvelu.ytj.fi. Retrieved 2022-10-05.
- ↑ "Kiekko-Espoo tekee paluun kaukaloon EKS:n ja EPS:n junnujen edariseurana". Länsiväylä (in Finnish). 2017-11-21. Retrieved 2022-10-05.
- ↑ "Naiskiekon menestynein seura Blues historiaa – Kiekko-Espoo palaa Naisten liigaan". Yle Urheilu (in Finnish). 2019-04-25. Retrieved 2022-10-05.
- ↑ Koivunen, Tommi (2018-05-26). "Kiekko-Espoo palaa kiekkokartalle – entinen SM-liigatähti aikoo pelata ja manageroida!". Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish). Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- 1 2 "Imatran Ketterä on jälleen Mestiksen mestari – Kiekko-Espoo kaatui viidessä ottelussa". mtvuutiset.fi (in Finnish). 2022-05-04. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ↑ Kostiainen, Jari (2022-09-01). "SM-liigan uusi Jokerit-päätös selkeyttää Kiekko-Espoon tilannetta – "Espoo on tehnyt paljon työtä vuosien ajan", kommentoi liigapomo". Länsiväylä (in Finnish). Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ↑ "Kiekko-Espoo otti askeleen lähemmäs SM-liigaa". www.iltalehti.fi (in Finnish). Retrieved 2023-10-31.
- ↑ "Kiekko-Espoo at eliteprospects.com". www.eliteprospects.com. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ↑ "Paidan jäädytys herkisti Jere Lehtisen - katso video". Yle Urheilu (in Finnish). 2014-09-30. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
- ↑ "Blues ei unohda menneisyyttään". Jatkoaika.com - Kaikki jääkiekosta (in Finnish). 2007-03-02. Retrieved 2023-10-24.