Brock Trotter, Denver forward. With all due respect to the likes of Jay Barriball, Andreas Nodl and Ryan Lasch, who all had impressive debuts, if you apply the same criteria as the most valuable player award to this one (namely, which player meant the most to his team), the redshirt freshman for the Pioneers is a clear choice.
Sidelined after six stellar games last season, Trotter bounced back from a scary sliced tendon to lead Denver offensively with 39 points in 38 games. On a team where rookies accounted for 137 points (48 percent of the team's offense), no rookie was more vital to his team's success than Trotter.
Sidelined after six stellar games last season, Trotter bounced back from a scary sliced tendon to lead Denver offensively with 39 points in 38 games. On a team where rookies accounted for 137 points (48 percent of the team's offense), no rookie was more vital to his team's success than Trotter.
3 comments:
The key word is "redshirt" Freshman. IMO, he is not a rookie.
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He still, right now, is only 19. It's not like he is a 22 year old redshirt frosh or anything. He didn't choose to have his leg sliced in such a horrific way. He gets the benefit of the doubt since he did not even skate or play for probably 4 or 5 months after the injury.
You are an idiot and an ass.
The kid had a hell of an injury to recover from and it took alot of work to get back in shape just to be able to skate again.
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