Terry Flanagan Memorial Award

Not to be confused with Terry Flanagan Award.
Terry Flanagan Memorial Award
Award details
Sport Ice hockey
Given for The player who best demonstrates perseverance, dedication and courage while overcoming severe adversity[1]
History
First award 1993
Final award 2013
Most recent Joe Rogers

The Terry Flanagan Memorial Award was an annual award given out at the conclusion of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association regular season to the player who best demonstrates perseverance, dedication and courage while overcoming severe adversity as voted by the coaches of each CCHA team.[2]

The Award was named after Terry Flanagan who was an assistant coach at Bowling Green for seven seasons before succumbing to cancer in 1991 at the age of 35.[3] Flanagan has another award named in his honor that is given out by the American Hockey Coaches Association to a coach for his career body of work. The first recipient of that award was Terry Flanagan himself in 1997.[4]

The Terry Flanagan Memorial Award was first awarded in 1993 and every year thereafter until 2013 when the CCHA was dissolved as a consequence of the Big Ten forming its men's ice hockey conference.[5]

Award winners

Winners by school

School Winners
Michigan State 4
Notre Dame 4
Alaska 2
Bowling Green 2
Ferris State 2
Lake Superior State 2
Miami 2
Ohio State 2
Michigan 1

Winners by position

Position Winners
Center 2
Right Wing 2
Left Wing 6
Forward 1
Defenceman 6
Goaltender 4

See also

References

General

Specific

  1. "CCHA Awards announced; seven Michigan connections honored". Michigan Hockey Now. 2013-03-22. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
  2. "Henderson and Odegard Recipients of CCHA Major Awards". Alaska Nanooks. 2013-03-22. Retrieved 2013-07-23.
  3. "Joe Rogers Receives CCHA's Terry Flanagan Award For Perseverance, Dedication And Courage". Notre Dame Sports. 2013-03-22. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
  4. "Men's hockey Associate Head Coach Brian Hills to be honored with the 2011 Terry Flanagan Award". RIT Athletics. 2011-01-24. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
  5. "The CCHA is going away, but its history will have a final resting place". USCHO.com. 2013-03-06. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
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