HOCKEY PLAYER

Fredrik Stillman

1966 - Today

Photo of Fredrik Stillman

Icon of person Fredrik Stillman

Fredrik Jan-Ove Stillman (born August 22, 1966) is a Swedish former professional ice hockey player, currently general manager for HV71 in the Swedish elite league Elitserien. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Fredrik Stillman is the 221st most popular hockey player (up from 274th in 2019), the 1,433rd most popular biography from Sweden (up from 1,562nd in 2019) and the 22nd most popular Swedish Hockey Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Fredrik Stillman by language

Loading...

Among HOCKEY PLAYERS

Among hockey players, Fredrik Stillman ranks 221 out of 676Before him are Roman Červenka, Paul Kariya, Scott Niedermayer, Aleksander Barkov Jr., Jörgen Jönsson, and Grant Fuhr. After him are Martin Procházka, Daniel Sedin, Tomáš Plekanec, Marián Gáborík, Mike Modano, and Dustin Brown.

Most Popular Hockey Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1966, Fredrik Stillman ranks 746Before him are Judith Wiesner, Sergei Shipov, Con O'Neill, Dennis Mitchell, Nick Sandow, and Arija Bareikis. After him are Stéphane Traineau, Leo Visser, Hirokazu Goshi, Hwang Hye-young, Francisco Javier Cruz, and Lyudmila Rogachova.

Others Born in 1966

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Fredrik Stillman ranks 1,433 out of 1,879Before him are Oscar Hiljemark (1992), Magnus Kihlstedt (1972), Jörgen Jönsson (1972), Markus Heikkinen (1978), Björn Wirdheim (1980), and Christopher Amott (1977). After him are Isabelle Haak (1999), Thomas Löfkvist (1984), Anders Holmertz (1968), Cornelia Jakobs (1992), Anders Andersson (1974), and Andreas Andersson (1974).

Among HOCKEY PLAYERS In Sweden

Among hockey players born in Sweden, Fredrik Stillman ranks 22Before him are Nicklas Bäckström (1987), Henrik Sedin (1980), Henrik Lundqvist (1982), Håkan Algotsson (1966), Jonas Bergqvist (1962), and Jörgen Jönsson (1972). After him are Daniel Sedin (1980), Ulf Samuelsson (1964), Joel Lundqvist (1982), Kenny Jönsson (1974), Niklas Kronwall (1981), and Fredrik Modin (1974).