Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

John B. Sollenberger Trophy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The John B. Sollenberger Trophy is given to American Hockey League's leading scorer for the season.

History

[edit]

The award was named for John B. Sollenberger in 1955. Sollenberger was a long-time contributor to the league as manager and president of the Hershey Bears and former chairman of the board of governors. The award was originally named after Wally Kilrea, who held the AHL's single-season scoring record when the award was instituted 1947–48. That season, the award was renamed in honour of its first recipient, Carl Liscombe, who broke Kilrea's scoring record.

Winners

[edit]
Season Player Team
Wally Kilrea Trophy
1947–48 Carl Liscombe Providence Reds
Carl Liscombe Trophy
1948–49 Sid Smith Pittsburgh Hornets
1949–50 Les Douglas Cleveland Barons
1950–51 Ab DeMarco Buffalo Bisons
1951–52 Ray Powell Providence Reds
1952–53 Eddie Olson (1) Cleveland Barons
1953–54 George Sullivan Hershey Bears
John B. Sollenberger Trophy[1]
1954–55 Eddie Olson (2) Cleveland Barons
1955–56 Zellio Toppazzini Providence Reds
1956–57 Fred Glover (1) Cleveland Barons
1957–58 Willie Marshall Hershey Bears
1958–59 Bill Hicke Rochester Americans
1959–60 Fred Glover (2) Cleveland Barons
1960–61 Bill Sweeney (1) Springfield Indians
1961–62 Bill Sweeney (2) Springfield Indians
1962–63 Bill Sweeney (3) Springfield Indians
1963–64 Gerry Ehman Rochester Americans
1964–65 Art Stratton Buffalo Bisons
1965–66 Dick Gamble Rochester Americans
1966–67 Gord Labossiere Quebec Aces
1967–68 Simon Nolet Quebec Aces
1968–69 Jeannot Gilbert Hershey Bears
1969–70 Jude Drouin Montreal Voyageurs
1970–71 Fred Speck Baltimore Clippers
1971–72 Don Blackburn Providence Reds
1972–73 Yvon Lambert Nova Scotia Voyageurs
1973–74 Steve West New Haven Nighthawks
1974–75 Doug Gibson Rochester Americans
1975–76 Jean-Guy Gratton Hershey Bears
1976–77 Andre Peloffy Springfield Indians
1977–78 Rick Adduono Rochester Americans
Gord Brooks Philadelphia Firebirds
1978–79 Bernie Johnston Maine Mariners
1979–80 Norm Dube Nova Scotia Voyageurs
1980–81 Mark Lofthouse Hershey Bears
1981–82 Mike Kaszycki New Brunswick Hawks
1982–83 Ross Yates Binghamton Whalers
1983–84 Claude Larose Sherbrooke Jets
1984–85 Paul Gardner (1) Binghamton Whalers
1985–86 Paul Gardner (2) Rochester Americans
1986–87 Tim Tookey Hershey Bears
1987–88 Bruce Boudreau Springfield Indians
1988–89 Stephan Lebeau Sherbrooke Canadiens
1989–90 Paul Ysebaert Utica Devils
1990–91 Kevin Todd Utica Devils
1991–92 Shaun Van Allen Cape Breton Oilers
1992–93 Don Biggs Binghamton Rangers
1993–94 Tim Taylor Adirondack Red Wings
1994–95 Peter White (1) Cape Breton Oilers
1995–96 Brad Smyth Carolina Monarchs
1996–97 Peter White (2) Philadelphia Phantoms
1997–98 Peter White (3) Philadelphia Phantoms
1998–99 Domenic Pittis Rochester Americans
1999–00 Christian Matte Hershey Bears
2000–01 Derek Armstrong Hartford Wolf Pack
2001–02 Donald MacLean St. John's Maple Leafs
2002–03 Steve Maltais Chicago Wolves
2003–04 Pavel Rosa Manchester Monarchs
2004–05 Jason Spezza Binghamton Senators
2005–06 Kirby Law Houston Aeros
2006–07 Darren Haydar Chicago Wolves
2007–08 Jason Krog Chicago Wolves
2008–09 Alexandre Giroux Hershey Bears
2009–10 Keith Aucoin Hershey Bears
2010–11 Corey Locke Binghamton Senators
2011–12 Chris Bourque (1) Hershey Bears
2012–13 Brandon Pirri Rockford IceHogs
2013–14 Travis Morin Texas Stars
2014–15 Brian O'Neill Manchester Monarchs
2015–16 Chris Bourque (2) Hershey Bears
2016–17 Kenny Agostino Chicago Wolves
2017–18 Chris Terry Laval Rocket
2018–19 Carter Verhaeghe Syracuse Crunch
2019–20 Sam Anas Iowa Wild
2020–21 Andrew Poturalski (1)[2] San Diego Gulls
2021–22 Andrew Poturalski (2) Chicago Wolves
2022–23 Michael Carcone Tucson Roadrunners
2023–24 Mavrik Bourque Texas Stars

References

[edit]
  1. ^ AHL Hall of Fame. "JOHN B. SOLLENBERGER TROPHY". AHL. Archived from the original on 2010-06-26. Retrieved 2011-05-09.
  2. ^ "San Diego's Poturalski, Bakersfield's Marody Win AHL Scoring Awards for 2020-21". OurSports Central. May 20, 2021.
[edit]