Modo Hockey suffered a 6-2 defeat to AIK in a HockeyAllsvenskan quarterfinal on Sunday, hampered by poor discipline with 20 penalty minutes. Despite the loss, players praised their effective penalty kill, which troubled AIK throughout the series. Coaches and players see it as a potential key to future success.
In Sunday's HockeyAllsvenskan quarterfinal match played away at AIK, Modo Hockey fell 6-2 amid significant disciplinary issues, accumulating 20 penalty minutes. The team was highly critical of its own lack of discipline post-game. However, Modo's penalty kill unit stood out, effectively neutralizing AIK's power plays except for one crucial goal. Ludwig Blomstrands scored AIK's 3-2 goal with just one second remaining in the second period, slipping past goaltender Adam. This tally proved match-deciding, according to observers. Forward Måns Carlsson noted to media, “We are better in boxplay than we are in powerplay.” Assistant coach Fredrik Andersson lauded the unit: “Boxplay-spelet är fantastiskt. ... Killarna i BP ska ha ett stort beröm – de gör ett grymt jobb. ... Kan bli avgörande i slutändan.” He highlighted its consistency over the series and the need to improve power play alongside it. Key penalty kill player Oscar Pettersson described their approach as aggressive, calling it the team's “DNA.” He said, “We stress them incredibly well,” but lamented the disruptions from excessive penalties, which prevented game flow. Modo had shown power play improvement in the match but could not overcome the penalties. Andersson emphasized that strong penalty killing, paired with better power play, could be decisive moving forward in the playoffs.