Sunday, July 7, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 7

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 7 talks about backup goaltender Ray Emery.

Ray Emery was born on September 28th, 1982 in Hamilton, Ontario. He began his playing career in the Ontario Junior C league with the Dunnville Terriers, appearing in twenty-two games to an appalling 3-19 win-loss record and a 6.36 goals-against average in the 1998-1999 season. In 1999-2000, Emery improved in the Ontario Junior B league with the Welland Cougars, playing in twenty-three games with a 13-10 record and a 2.81 GAA, along with one shutout. For the 1999-2000 to the 2001-2002 seasons, Emery played in the Ontario Hockey League, compiling a 60-49-11 record in 127 games played, with a 3.10 GAA and six shutouts for the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds. Between his second and third seasons with the Greyhounds, Emery was drafted 99th overall in the 2001 Entry Draft as a prospect for the Ottawa Senators. Then, at the end of the 2002-2003 season, Emery made three appearances with the Senators in Ottawa, winning in his only start while the other appearances came in relief, and he had a solid 1.42 GAA. Before that, Emery had played with the American Hockey League Binghamton Senators, posting 27-17-6 record in fifty games, while playing to a 2.42 GAA and shutting out the opponent seven times. Emery still played in Binghamton in the 2003-2004 season, appearing fifty-three times with 21-23-7 record while allowing goals at a 2.47 GAA rate but only three shutouts. In three more games in Ottawa, Emery had two wins and a 2.38 GAA. Emery likely would have played in the NHL for 2004-2005, but due to the season-cancelling lockout, stayed in Binghamton and had a 2.65 GAA an 28-18-5 record in fifty-one games. Emery got the NHL to stay in 2005-2006, starting thirty-eight games while making one relief appearance, with three shutouts, a 2.82 GAA, and a 23-11 record, as well as ten games in the playoffs that saw him have a 5-5 record and 2.88 GAA. Emery improved his NHL numbers in a larger role in 2006-2007, playing to a 33-16 record and 2.47 GAA with five shutouts in fifty-eight games, followed by twenty playoff games with a 13-7 record and a 2.26 GAA as the Senators fell short against the Anaheim Ducks for the Stanley Cup. Emery had his struggles off the ice though, including traffic violation and legal issues, which came to a head in 2007-2008, as the Senators soured on his behavior. He played in thirty-one games while making a 12-13 record and a 3.13 GAA before returning to Binghamton. There he had a solid 3.00 GAA and 1-1 record in two games while dealing with injuries. Emery's contract was up in the 2008 offseason, but with personality questions and a drop in production, no one offered him an NHL contract. On July 9th, Atlant Mytishchi of the Kontinental Hockey League of Russia and Eastern Europe signed Emery. In the 2008-2009 season, Emery posted a 22-8 record and a 1.86 GAA with Atlant, followed by seven playoff games with a matching GAA and a 3-3 record. This earned him some NHL interest again, when he was signed by the Philadelphia Flyers on June 10th, 2009. For 2009-2010, Emery played in twenty-nine games, all starts, and he had a 16-11 record and a 2.64 GAA, with three shutouts during the season. However, Emery's season was cut short by a disease called Avascular Necrosis, which required surgery to cure, as well as hip issues. The Flyers chose not to gamble on Emery again, but the Ducks that had previously beaten Emery in the Stanley Cup came calling with a one-year contract signed on February 7th, 2011 after his rehabilitation was complete. They assigned him to the Syracuse Crunch of the AHL, where he played in three games with a 2.62 GAA and a 2-1 record, followed by two later wins that brought his GAA under two. With the Ducks, he played in ten games with a 2.28 GAA and a 7-2 record as a backup to Jonas Hiller. Due to the remarkable recovery from Avascular Necrosis, Emery was nominated by the NHL for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy, which honors the player who shows the most dedication and perseverance to hockey, but he didn't win it. Emery signed with the Chicago Blackhawks on October 3rd, 2011 to back up Corey Crawford. Emery actually ended up starting twenty-seven of his thirty-four appearances in 2011-2012 after Crawford struggled, playing to a 2.81 GAA and a 15-9 record. He did not play in the playoffs during that postseason. Emery returned to the Blackhawks for the lockout-shortened 2013 season, playing in 21 games with a fabulous 1.94 GAA and a 17-1 record on the team allowing the fewest goals during the regular season. This means that Emery and Crawford shared the William M. Jennings trophy. Crawford took the reins during the playoffs though, meaning Emery watched from the bench as the Blackhawks won the 2013 Stanley Cup. However, Emery was not brought back by the Blackhawks for 2013-2014, and will play in a platoon with Steve Mason in the Philadelphia Flyers crease.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 6

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 6 talks about journeyman defenseman Sheldon Brookbank.

Sheldon Brookbank was born on October 3rd, 1980, in Lanigan, Saskatchewan. He began his hockey career at age eighteen with the Humboldt Broncos of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League, although his first two seasons from 1998-1999 and 1999-2000 do not have readily accessible statistics on Hockey-Reference.com. He played a third season with Humboldt, posting a line of fourteen goals and thirty-five assists in fifty-nine games, as well as 281 penalty minutes. Brookbank left the junior ranks in 2000-2001to play in the ECHL with the Mississippi Sea Wolves, where he had eight goals and twenty-one assists to go with 137 penalty minutes in sixty-two games, and then playing in another ten postseason games with the Sea Wolves, putting up one goal, four assists, and twenty-seven penalty minutes. He then joined the American Hockey League to play with the Grand Rapids Griffins for six more games. In this time, he had one assist and twenty-four penalty minutes. In 2002-2003, Brookbank remained with the Griffins, playing in sixty-nine games with two goals and eleven assists to his credit, while sitting for 136 penalty minutes. In the playoffs, he supplied one goal and three assists with twenty-eight penalty minutes. On July 21st, 2003, Brookbank was signed by the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, and assigned to play with their AHL affiliate, the Cincinnati Mighty Ducks for the 2003-2004 season. Here he had two goals and nine assists in a then-career-high seventy-four games played, while serving 216 penalty minutes. In nine playoffs games with Cincinnati, Brookbank had only two assists and twenty penalty minutes. He remained in the AHL during the 2004-2005 season, where he played in another sixty games, scoring a goal and adding eleven assists and 181 penalty minutes in the regular season. The playoffs saw him bring only forty penalty minutes with no points in eleven games. On August 4th, 2005, Brookbank was signed as a free agent by the Nashville Predators, who then assigned him to the Milwaukee Admirals for the 2005-2006 season. Brookbank was much more successful with the Admirals, scoring nine goals and dishing twenty-six assists in his first season of seventy-three games, while still adding grit with 232 penalty minutes, the most since his junior career. The Admirals made the playoffs, and in twenty-one postseason games, Brookbank registered one goal and eight assists as well as forty-nine penalty minutes. Brookbank began 2006-2007 with Milwaukee as well, and played in seventy-eight games to set a new career high in appearances, as well as goals and assists with fifteen and thirty-eight, respectively. However, during the playoffs, he went without a point and only six penalty minutes in four games. Nonetheless, Brookbank made it to the NHL for three games with the Nashvile Predators, supplying one assist and twelve penalty minutes during that short time. In the offseason, Brookbank signed with the Columbus Blue Jackets but never played for them after being waived, where he was then claimed by the New Jersey Devils. He played only one game with the AHL Lowell Devils during the 2007-2008 season, and spent another forty-four with the New Jersey Devils, playing to a line of eight assists and sixty-three penalty minutes. Brookbank began 2008-2009 with the Devils, going without a point in fifteen games while accumulating twenty-five penalty minutes before being shipped out to the Anaheim Ducks organization (his second stint with that franchise) on February 3rd, 2009 in exchange for David McIntyre. He scored one goal and added three assists and fifty-one penalty minutes. The Ducks provided stability for Brookbank, as he remained with them for the next three seasons. In 2009-2010, he had nine assists with 114 penalty minutes in sixty-six games, followed by forty games without a point but with sixty-three penalty minutes in 2010-2011, and finally a career-high eighty games in 2011-2012, which saw him score three goals and chip in eleven assists while serving a modest seventy-penalty minutes. He was signed on a two-year contract by the Chicago Blackhawks for the 2013 season, and he ended up playing in twenty-six games, with only a single goal and twenty-one penalty minutes to his name. He also made one postseason appearance, which like the other seventeen before that, saw him score no points despite playing on the championship winning team.

Friday, July 5, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 5

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 5 looks at enforcer forward Brandon Bollig. 

Brandon Bollig was born on January 31st, 1987, in St. Charles, Missouri. He began his playing career in the United States Hockey League at the age of nineteen, playing with the Lincoln Stars in the 2005-2006 season. During the season, he recorded eight goals, eight assists, and 175 penalty minutes. Bollig remained in Lincoln for the next two seasons, and over those years he had twenty-nine goals, twenty-eight assists, and 418 penalty minutes in 115 games. Over all three seasons with the Stars, Bollig appeared in twenty-six postseason games, while potting four goals, dishing eight assists, and serving sixty-four penalty minutes. Bollig attended college after his three years with the Lincoln Stars, and played college hockey with St. Lawrence University. Between 2008 and 2010 at St. Lawrence, Bollig played in seventy-eight games, posting thirteen goals and twenty-five assists, as well as a toned-down penalty minute total of 134. On April 3rd, 2010, Bollig was signed as a free agent by the Chicago Blackhawks, who then assigned him to the American Hockey League to play with the Rockford IceHogs. In three games to close out the season in Rockford, Bollig had a goal, an assist, and seven penalty minutes. Bollig played a full season with the IceHogs in 2010-2011, appearing in fifty-five games and scoring just four goals, while supplying 115 penalty minutes. Bollig also played most of the 2011-2012 season in Rockford, where he had three goals and six assists in fifty-three games, while being punished to the tune of 163 penalty minutes before being called up to the NHL to play with the Blackhawks after their trade of previous enforcer John Scott to the New York Rangers at the end of February. He did not record a point in eighteen regular season games, having only fifty-eight penalty minutes to his credit, but he appeared in four more postseason games, where he scored his first goal at the NHL level against the Phoenix Coyotes. Bollig was returned to the AHL for the beginning of the 2012-2013 campaign, as the NHL locked out the players, and in thirty-five games with Rockford, he had five goals, four assists, and 157 penalty minutes. Bollig then played twenty-five more games at the NHL level during the shortened season, going pointless but still posting a nasty fifty-one penalty minutes. He also made five postseason appearances, again without a point and this time only a minor, two-minute penalty during those games. Due to his playing in over half of the regular season games, Bollig will be able to have his name on the Stanley Cup after the Blackhawks defeated the Boston Bruins to cap off the shortened season.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 4

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 4 takes a look at young forward Ben Smith. 

Ben Smith was born on July 11th, 1988, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and was raised in Avon, Connecticut. Smith began his hockey career at Boston College, where he played for four years. In his freshman season of 2006-2007, Smith played in forty-two games, scoring eight goals and adding eight assists. During the next season, Smith blossomed into a higher-scoring player, recording twenty-five goals and twenty-five assists during his sophomore year. This led him to be drafted in the sixth round of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft by the Chicago Blackhawks. He failed to match that success in his junior year, playing a career-low thirty-seven games with only six goals and eleven assists to his credit. Finally, in his senior season of 2009-2010, Smith rebounded to play in forty-two games while netting sixteen goals and supplying twenty-one assists. He then joined the Rockford IceHogs of the American Hockey League for their playoffs in the same season, scoring one goal in three games. Smith spent a majority of the 2010-2011 season in Rockford, playing in sixty-three games and scoring nineteen goals and twelve assists. He also made six appearances in the NHL, where he had one goal. Smith had three goals during the seven games in the postseason for that season. He continued with the Blackhawks in 2011-2012, but struggled with only two goals in thirteen games, and still had yet to record an assist at the NHL level, so he was sent back to Rockford. There, he played in thirty-eight games, scoring fifteen goals and passing sixteen more assists. Smith stayed with the IceHogs in 2012-2013, playing in fifty-four games to the tune of twenty-seven goals and twenty assists. This earned him a return to the NHL after the lockout, but he was often a healthy scratch for the Blackhawks, scoring just one goal in one game. The Blackhawks did return to the playoffs, but Smith was still frequently watching the game from the press box. The one exception to this came in Game 3 against the Boston Bruins in Boston, when Marian Hossa was declared too injured to play and Smith was subbed into the lineup, skating on the second line. This appearance in the 2-0 loss at the time may not have meant much, but when the Blackhawks won the next three games straight, Smith had the honor of having his name automatically engraved onto the Stanley Cup as 2013 champion.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 3

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 3 takes a look at pesky forward Dan Carcillo. 

Dan "Carbomb" Carcillo was born on January 28th, 1985, in King City, Ontario, Canada. At the age of seventeen, Carcillo began playing junior hockey with the Milton Merchants of the Ontario Junior B league, posting fifteen goals and sixteen assists in forty-seven games during the 2001-2002 season. He also had 162 penalty minutes. Carcillo jumped into the spotlight more in his second season, playing in the Ontario Hockey League with the Sarnia Sting, where he potted twenty-nine goals and supplied thirty-seven assists in sixty-eight games, as well as 157 penalty minutes, during 2002-2003. His season culminated in a nomination to the Canadian World Junior squad in 2003, where he scored two goals and two assists in seven games, as well as adding a gritty thirty-three penalty minutes. Later that year, he was drafted in the third round, 73rd overall, in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft by the Pittsburgh Penguins. The next season, Carcillo remained with the Sting, putting up thirty goals and twenty-nine assists in sixty-one games, in addition to 148 penalty minutes. During the 2004-2005 season, Carcillo played with the Sting in twelve games, with only two goals and seven assists to go with forty penalty minutes, before being traded to Mississauga IceDogs, where he recorded eight goals and ten assists while sitting seventy-five minutes in the penalty box. Carcillo officially joined the Penguins organization at the American Hockey League level with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, producing eleven goals, thirteen assists, and a massive 311 penalty minutes over fifty-one games. Carcillo also spent time in the ECHL, where in six games, he had three goals, two assists, and thirty-two penalty minutes. Carcillo spent the bulk of the the 2006-2007 season in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, playing in fifty-two games with a surprising twenty-one goals, nine assists, and a usual hefty load of penalty minutes coming in at 183 for the season. On February 27th, 2007, Carcillo was traded with the Penguins' third round choice in the 2008 draft to the Phoenix Coyotes in exchange for Georges Laraque. The Coyotes traded that pick in a separate deal to the New York Rangers, who selected Tomas Kundratek, most recently of the Washington Capitals. Carcillo closed out 2007 with the Coyotes in the NHL, playing in eighteen games while scoring four goals, three assists, and sitting in the sin bin for seventy-four minutes. Carcillo returned to the AHL in 2007-2008, playing in five games with the Coyotes' affiliate, the San Antonio Rampage, with two goals and an assist to match with sixteen penalty minutes before returning to the NHL. There, he had thirteen goals and eleven assists in fifty-seven games, as well as a 324 penalty minutes. This established his reputation as primarily a pest with surprising offensive upside. Also during the season, Carcillo recorded his first hat trick, on April 4th, 2008. During 2008-2009, Carcillo made fifty-four appearances with the Coyotes, putting up only three goals and ten assists to go with 174 penalty minutes, before being traded on March 4th, 2009. The trade saw Carcillo headed to the Philadelphia Flyers (considered a good fit for his style of play) in exchange for Scottie Upshall and the Flyers' second round pick in 2011, used by the Coyotes on Lucas Lessio. In the final twenty games of the season, Carcillo had only four assists and eighty penalty minutes. The Flyers did make the Stanley Cup playoffs though, allowing Carcillo his first chance in the postseason, where he had a goal and an assist in five games during the first round exit by the Flyers. Carcillo had a much better season in 2009-2010, staying with the Flyers all year and playing in seventy-six games. He recorded twelve goals and ten assists, while serving 207 penalty minutes, and dishing out 194 hits in the first year of tracking for that statistic. Five of the penalty minutes Carcillo had occurred during the 2010 Winter Classic at Fenway Park, where he fought Shawn Thornton of the host Boston Bruins. The Flyers again returned to the playoffs that season, and Carcillo played in seventeen postseason games, with two goals, four assists, and thirty-four penalty minutes, although the Flyers fell short to the Chicago Blackhawks after the infamous Game 6 goal by Patrick Kane. Carcillo fell out of favor with the Flyers in 2010-2011, posting only four goals and two assists in fifty seven games, while also watching his penalty minutes and hits tumble to 127 and 80, respectively. During the offseason in 2011, Carcillo signed a one-year contract with the Chicago Blackhawks at the opening of free agency. For the 2011-2012 season, Carcillo played in only twenty-eight games, with two goals, nine assists, eighty-two penalty minutes, and seventy-six hits to his credit. Interestingly enough, it was one of those hits that spelled the end of his season, as during a game against the Edmonton Oilers, Carcillo dished out a malicious hit on defenseman Tom Gilbert. Both players were injured, and Carcillo incurred a seven-game suspension from the Department of Player Safety. This was the least of his problems though, as his season was over when his injury was revealed as a torn ACL in his left leg. While sitting out, the Blackhawks resigned Carcillo for two years. With the help of the lockout, Carcillo was able to play for the Blackhawks in 23 games for the shortened 2013 season, posting two goals and an assist as well as a shockingly low eleven penalty minutes and thirty-seven hits. Most likely, Carcillo has changed his style of play to avoid becoming a repeat offender with the Department of Player Safety. During the playoffs, Carcillo was frequently a healthy scratch, playing in only four games, with just one assist. Nonetheless, he is considered a part of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks and can say that he has been on both ends of a Stanley Cup clinching game.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 2

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 2 looks at veteran forward Jamal Mayers' long quest for Lord Stanley's Cup. 

Jamal Mayers was born on October 24th, 1974, in Toronto, Ontario. His playing career began at age 16 with the Ontario Junior B league team in Markham, the Thunderbirds, where in 1990-1991 he put up twelve goals and twenty-four assists in forty-four games, as well as seventy-eight penalty minutes. The next season saw him at the Ontario Junior A league with the Thornhill Thunderbirds, where in fifty-six games he registered thirty-eight goals and sixty-seven assists as a star offensive forward. He left the Junior hockey system in 1992, electing to play college hockey at Western Michigan University from 1992 to 1996. During this time, he was drafted by the St. Louis Blues in the fourth round of the 1993 entry draft. At the end of his college career, Mayers joined the American Hockey League affiliate of the St. Louis Blues, the Worcester IceCats for the 1996-1997 season, and he recorded twelve goals and fourteen assists as well as 104 penalty minutes in sixty-two games. This season helped to establish his role as a gritty, third-line style player with occasional point production as well. He earned a call-up to the NHL at the end of the season, playing in six games while earning an assist. Mayers spent all of the 1997-1998 season at Worcester, and improved to nineteen goals and twenty-four assists in sixty-one games, while also sitting for 117 penalty minutes. The next year, Mayers produced sixteen points in twenty games with the IceCats, and then joined the Blues, recording four goals and five assists in thirty-four games, as well as forty penalty minutes. From 1999-2008, Mayers stayed with the Blues full-time, with the exception of the cancelled 2004-2005 season due to the lockout. During that time, he was generally good for around 8-10 goals, 10-12 assists, and 90-100 penalty minutes, except in 2002-2003, where he only played in fifteen games. Over these nine years, Mayers also represented Canada at the World Championships three times, with seven goals and four assists over twenty-five games in those tournaments. During the lockout in 2004, Mayers went to Sweden, playing in the second-tier league with Hammarby IF Stockholm and recording twenty-two points in nineteen games. He then returned to North America to finish the season with the Missouri River Otters in the UHL, posting seven points and sixty-eight penalty minutes in thirteen games. Also over the span of his time with the Blues, he appeared in Stanley Cup playoffs, playing in forty-eight games while accumulating thirteen points, but never reaching the Finals. Prior to the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, Mayers was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs for a third round selection, which was used on James Livingston. For the 2008-2009 season, Mayers played with the Maple Leafs in seventy-one games, with seven goals and nine assists to go with eighty-two penalty minutes. Mayers began 2009-2010 with the Maple Leafs as well, earning eight points in forty-four games, while racking up seventy-eight penalty minutes, before being included in the blockbuster trade that saw the Maple Leafs send Matt Stajan, Niklas Hagman, Ian White, and Mayers to the Calgary Flames for star defenseman Dion Phaneuf, Fredrik Sjostrom, and Keith Aulie on January 31st, 2010. This trade has been considered one of the most lopsided trades in the last decade. Finishing out the season with the Flames, Mayers had one goal and five assists to go with fifty-three penalty minutes in twenty-seven games. On August 4th, 2010, Mayers signed with the San Jose Sharks for the upcoming season, and played in seventy-eight games during the season, scoring three goals and assisting on eleven others while posting 124 penalty minutes, his most since 2005-2006 with the Blues. In the postseason, Mayers appeared in twelve games and had only twelve penalty minutes to show for it. Mayers was not resigned by the Sharks in the offseason, and he later signed a one year contract with the Chicago Blackhawks. In 2011-2012, Mayers potted six goals and nine assists in a career-high eighty-one games, while trimming his penalty minutes to ninety-one, as well as three more playoff games with no points or penalty minutes. The Blackhawks resigned Mayers for the lockout-shortened 2013 season, but he only appeared in nineteen games, managing just two assists and sixteen penalty minutes. Mayers made no postseason appearances in his fifteenth NHL season, watching from the press box as his teammates with the Blackhawks hoisted the Stanley Cup. Since he did not meet the requirements for automatic inclusion on the Stanley Cup, the Blackhawks will have to petition the league for approval to put his name on it. Regardless, Mayers was finally a part of a championship team for the first time in his long career. Mayers is also notable as one of the few black hockey players in the 1990s and 2000s, helping to promote hockey for all races.

Monday, July 1, 2013

From Cradle to Cup: The Story of the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks, Part 1

From Cradle to Cup will be a series running throughout July 2013 looking back at players on the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks roster for their Stanley Cup-winning campaign. Part 1 takes a look at third string goalie Henrik Karlsson.

Henrik Karlsson was born on November 27th, 1983 in Tumba, Sweden. He began playing in the Swedish U18 league in 2000 with Hammarby IF Stockholm, appearing in two games and surrendering seven goals. He advanced to the Swedish Junior league in the same organization, appearing in thirty-six games for Hammarby IF Stockholm from 2000-2002, allowing 153 goals while playing to a goals-against average in the mid-4 range, which is typically not considered strong. Between 2003 and 2004, Karlsson went to the third-tier league in the Swedish system, playing for his hometown team Botkyrka HC Tumba in 21 games, although statistics are unknown. He also had a shutout in one game for Olofstroms IK in the 2004-05 season. He was promoted to the second-tier Swedish league after that appearance, playing for IK Oskarshamn and making twelve appearances while surrendering twenty-eight goals. In 2006-2007, Karlsson returned to the Hammarby IF Stockholm system, playing for their tier-2 team in thirty-five games, posting a 3.52 GAA. In 2007-2008, Karlsson began the season with Hammarby, but was traded to the Malmo Redhawks late in the year. Between the two clubs, Karlsson maintained a 3.75 GAA over thirty-two appearances in goal. He improved in his first full season with the Redhawks in 2008-09, dropping his GAA to 2.45 with four shutouts in thirty-two games, before being promoted to Swedish Elitserien, the top level of Swedish hockey, with Sodertalje SK. In 15 games with Sodertalje, Karlsson allowed only thirty-three goals. He was on the move again for the 2009-2010 season, playing for Farjestads BK Karlstad in the Elitserien, making thirty-four appearance while allowing a 2.45 GAA. Karlsson then signed a one year contract with the Calgary Flames of the NHL after being traded from the San Jose Sharks. With a big-league role in mind, Karlsson was able to avoid the KHL of eastern Europe. During the 2010-2011 season, Karlsson made seventeen appearances, of which eleven were starts, and posted a 2.58 GAA with a 4-5-0 record and a .908 save percentage. His moderate success was not replicated in 2011-2012, and Karlsson struggled in his nine appearances for the Flames, to the tune of a 1-4-0 record and a 3.17 GAA during the season. He also appeared in four games for the Flames' AHL affiliate, the Abbotsford Heat, with a 2.26 GAA and a 2-2-0 record. However, because of a midseason injury to his MCL and a lack of success, the Flames determined Karlsson was expendable, and at the end of the 2012-2013 lockout, Karlsson was traded to the Chicago Blackhawks for a seventh round draft pick. Karlsson did not play in any games for Blackhawks during their Stanley Cup run, sitting at third on the depth chart behind Corey Crawford and Ray Emery, but he did play for their AHL affiliate, the Rockford IceHogs.