peoplepill id: hanna-marklund
HM
Sweden
1 views today
1 views this week
Hanna Marklund
Swedish association football player

Hanna Marklund

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Swedish association football player
From
Work field
Gender
Female
Star sign
Place of birth
Skellefteå, Sweden
Age
46 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Hanna Gunilla Marklund (born November 26, 1977 in Skellefteå) is a Swedish former football player. She played as a defender and wore shirt number 4.

Career

Marklund started playing in Varuträsk IF near Skellefteå, where she grew up. She moved on to play in Damallsvenskan with Sunnanå SK. In 2000, she joined Umeå IK, with whom she won Damallsvenskan three years in a row (2000–2002). After the 2004 season she decided to move back to Skellefteå and rejoin Sunnanå SK, where her two sisters Carolina and Mirjam also played. She went on to captain Sunnanå SK.

She made her first appearance in the Swedish national team on August 8, 1997 against Iceland. She became a regular member of the team, winning a total of 118 caps and scoring six international goals.

In November 2005 she won Diamantbollen, an award given the best female player in Sweden each year.

On January 7, 2008, Marklund announced her retirement from both the national team and Sunnanå SK as a result of her pregnancy.

Matches and goals scored at World Cup & Olympic tournaments

Hanna Marklund appeared for Sweden in two World Cups (USA 2003, China 2007) and two Olympic Games (Sydney 2000, Athens 2004.) Marklund was on the roster for the 1999 World Cup as well, but did not see any playing time.

Key (expand for notes on“world cup and olympic goals”)
LocationGeographic location of the venue where the competition occurred
LineupStart – played entire match
on minute (off player) – substituted on at the minute indicated, and player was substituted off at the same time

off minute (on player) – substituted off at the minute indicated, and player was substituted on at the same time
(c) – captain

MinThe minute in the match the goal was scored. For list that include caps, blank indicates played in the match but did not score a goal.
Assist/passThe ball was passed by the player, which assisted in scoring the goal. This column depends on the availability and source of this information.
penalty or pkGoal scored on penalty-kick which was awarded due to foul by opponent. (Goals scored in penalty-shoot-out, at the end of a tied match after extra-time, are not included.)
ScoreThe match score after the goal was scored.
ResultThe final score.

W – match was won
L – match was lost to opponent
D – match was drawn
(W) – penalty-shoot-out was won after a drawn match
(L) – penalty-shoot-out was lost after a drawn match

aetThe score at the end of extra-time; the match was tied at the end of 90' regulation
psoPenalty-shoot-out score shown in parenthesis; the match was tied at the end of extra-time
Orange background color – Olympic women's football tournament
Blue background color – FIFA women's world cup final tournament
GoalMatchDateLocationOpponentLineupMinScoreResultCompetition
Sydney 2000 Women's Olympic Football Tournament
1
2000-9-19Melbourne Germany82.

off 82' (on Johansson)

0–1 L

Group match
USA 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup
2
2003-9-21Washington, DC United StatesStart

1–3 L

Group match
3
2003-9-25Philadelphia North KoreaStart

1–0 W

Group match
4
2003-9-28Columbus NigeriaStart

3–0 W

Group match
5
2003-10-1Foxborough BrazilStart

2–1 W

Quarter Final
6
2003-10-5Portland CanadaStart

2–1 W

Semi-Final
7
2003-10-12Carson GermanyStart

1–2 L

Final
Athens 2004 Women's Olympic Football Tournament
8
2004-8-11Volos JapanStart

0–1 L

Group match
1
9
2004-8-17Volos NigeriaStart681-1

2–1 W

Group match
10
2004-8-20Volos AustraliaStart

2–1 W

Quarter-Final
11
2004-8-23Patras BrazilStart

0–1 L

Semi Final
12
2004-8-26Piraeus GermanyStart

0–1 L

Bronze Medal Match
China 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup
13
2007-9-11Chengdu NigeriaStart

1–1 D

Group match
14
2007-9-14Chengdu United StatesStart

0–2 L

Group match
15
2007-9-18Tianjin North KoreaStart

2–1 W

Group match

Matches and goals scored at European Championship tournaments

Hanna Marklund participated in two European Championship tournaments: Germany 2001, and England 2005.

GoalMatchDateLocationOpponentLineupMinScoreResultCompetition
2001 European Championship
1
2001-6-23Erfurt GermanyStart

1–3 L

Group match
2
2001-6-27Jena EnglandStart

4–0 W

Group match
3
2001-6-30Erfurt RussiaStart

1–0 W

Group match
4
2001-7-4Ulm DenmarkStart

1–0 W

Semi-Final
5
2001-7-7Ulm GermanyStart

0–1 L

Final
2005 European Championship
6
2005-6-5Blackpool DenmarkStart

1–1 D

Group match
7
2005-6-8Blackpool FinlandStart

0–0 D

Group match
8
2005-6-11Blackburn EnglandStart

1–0 W

Group match
9
2005-6-16Warrington NorwayStart

2–3 L

Semi-Final

Honours

Club

Umeå IK
  • Damallsvenskan: Winner (3) 2000, 2001, 2002
    • Runner-up (2) 2003, 2004
  • Svenska Cupen: Winner (3) 2001, 2002, 2003
    • Runner-up 2004
  • UEFA Women's Champions League: Winner (2) 2002-2003, 2003-2004
Sunnanå SK
  • Svenska Cupen: Runner-up 1997
Individual

International tournaments with the national team

  • UEFA Women's Championship: Runner-up 2001, Third 2005
  • FIFA Women's World Cup 1999
  • FIFA Women's World Cup 2003: Runner-up 2003
  • FIFA Women's World Cup 2007
  • 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney
  • 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 20 Mar 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Hanna Marklund is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Reference sources
References
Hanna Marklund
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes