Linköpings HC Franzén began playing ice hockey in Boro/Vetlanda HC,
Landsbro near
Vetlanda in Sweden. He was suspended for a full year after knocking down a referee, but was then moved to play with the Tranås AIF in the Swedish
Allsvenskan in 1999. After one season with the club, he moved to
Linköpings HC, where he stayed for five seasons, helping the club win the promotion for play in the Swedish top-level
Elitserien in 2001. Recommended by European scout
Håkan Andersson, Franzén was drafted by the Red Wings in
2004 in the third round, 97th overall.
Detroit Red Wings (2005–2016) For the
2005–06 season, Franzén played in the NHL with Detroit, totaling 80 games for 16 points (12 goals and four assists) in his rookie season. His workmanlike service was lauded by former teammate and
captain Steve Yzerman, who gave him the nickname "The
Mule" because "he carries the load." (Franzen's rookie season was also Yzerman's final NHL season) Franzén was named "Detroit Red Wings Rookie of the Year" by the Detroit Sports Broadcasters' Association for his play during the season. In August 2006, Franzén re-signed with Detroit on a three-year,
$2.825 million contract. On 21 April 2007, during a
Stanley Cup playoff game against the
Calgary Flames, Flames goaltender
Jamie McLennan slashed Franzén twice in the leg. McLennan was due to be assessed a minor penalty. However, after play was stopped, McLennan again violently slashed Franzén in the stomach, resulting in a game misconduct for McLennan. In the following game, game six, Franzén scored the winning goal in double-overtime to advance the Red Wings past the Flames. On 30 March 2008, Franzén scored his sixth game-winning goal for the month of March, against the
Nashville Predators. This goal broke the Red Wings team record for most game-winning goals in one month (5) set by
Gordie Howe in February 1952, and duplicated in January 1956. (Howe's feat was matched by Franzén's teammate
Henrik Zetterberg in January 2007.) Coincidentally, Franzén broke Howe's record while Howe was attending the game and celebrating his 80th birthday. Franzén scored his first career NHL
hat-trick against the
Colorado Avalanche in game two of the Western Conference Semifinals of the
2008 playoffs. It was the Red Wings' first playoff hat-trick since
Darren McCarty scored three goals on 18 May
2002, also against the Avalanche. During game four, on 1 May 2008, Franzén had another hat-trick, scoring his ninth goal of the series, breaking the Detroit Red Wings franchise record for most goals in a playoff series: Gordie Howe had scored eight goals in a seven-game series in 1949. Franzén currently holds the franchise record (tied with Henrik Zetterberg) for most goals in a playoff year with 13, a record previously held at ten by
Petr Klíma,
Sergei Fedorov, and
Brett Hull. Zetterberg tied his mark of 13 goals after scoring the Cup winning goal in game six of the
2008 Stanley Cup Final against the
Pittsburgh Penguins. in game five of the
2009 Finals. On 11 April 2009, Franzén signed a contract extension with the Red Wings for 11 years. On 24 May, in game four of the Western Conference Finals in an 6–1 victory against the
Chicago Blackhawks for a 3–1 series lead, Franzén was involved in a minor scrum behind the net after the whistle. Franzén was exchanging words with Blackhawks’ forward
Patrick Kane when Kane began chewing on his mouth guard. Franzén reached down and ripped the mouth guard out of Kane's mouth and threw it down to the ice. On 8 October 2009, Franzén suffered a torn
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in a 3–2 win over the Chicago Blackhawks, forcing him to miss 55 games before he was able to return to Detroit's lineup in a game against the
St. Louis Blues on 9 February 2010, where he recorded an assist on a
Pavel Datsyuk goal as the Red Wings lost 4–3. Following Detroit's next game, he recorded his first goal since returning from injury. On 6 May, Franzén scored three goals in a span of 3:26 (two seconds shy of the NHL record for fastest playoff hat-trick) in the first period of Detroit's
Western Conference Semifinal game four against the top-seeded
San Jose Sharks, with the team facing elimination. He had been initially credited with another goal, scored two minutes before his first credited goal of the night, but this was later corrected to an assist on a
Todd Bertuzzi redirect. While this goal would not have grabbed him the NHL record fastest hat-trick, he did eventually reclaim his tally by scoring a fourth goal later on in the game as the Red Wings won 7–1 to extend the series to a fifth game where they would go onto lose 2–1 to lose the series in five. On 2 February 2011, Franzén became only the second player in 14 years, joining
Marián Gáborík, to score
five goals in one game. He tallied two even strength goals, two
power play goals and added an
empty net goal in a 7–5 victory over the
Ottawa Senators. He joins Sergei Fedorov and
Syd Howe as the only Red Wings to do so. On 3 March 2014, Franzén was named NHL's
First Star of the Week. He recorded three goals and two assists in two games to help lead the Red Wings to consecutive road victories. Franzén missed the remainder of the season due to concussion symptoms after he was blindsided by a check late in a game at Edmonton by the Oilers'
Rob Klinkhammer on 6 January 2015. After being deemed medically fit to return in the 2015–2016 season, Franzén would play only two games before the return of concussion symptoms and was put on the team's long-term injury reserve list. Franzén's contract expired in 2020, when the NHL season was cut short by the
COVID-19 pandemic. ==International play==