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Hockey Humanitarian Award

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hockey Humanitarian Award is an award that is given annually, since 1996, to a college ice hockey player – male or female – who has given back to their communities in the true humanitarian spirit.

Selection process

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Every year, the foundation board solicits nominations from every NCAA varsity hockey program in the country, male and female, in Divisions I to III.

Leadership

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The founding directors of the award are John R. Greenhalgh and Jeffrey Millman, after observing injured Division I player (and their choice as first recipient), J. P. McKersie, coaching their son's minor hockey team.[1][non-primary source needed] Sponsors of the award include Ulmer & Berne, LLP, the Joyce M. And Herbert W. Stielau Foundation, Brokaw, the American Hockey Coaches Association, and USCHO.com.

Winners

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Year Player School
1996 J. P. McKersie Boston University
1997 Blake Sloan Michigan
1998 Erik Raygor Wisconsin
1999 Kristine Pierce RIT
2000 James Leger Maine
2001 Jason Cupp Nebraska–Omaha
2002 Rocky Ray Reeves Buffalo State
2003 Sam Paolini Cornell
2004 Chanda Gunn Northeastern
2005 Sarah Carlson Boston College
2006 Eric Leroux Princeton
2007 Kristin Savard Yale
2008 William Bruce Williams
2009 Missy Elumba Northeastern
2010 Ethan Cox Colgate
2011 Brooks Dyroff Boston College
2012 Aleca Hughes Yale
2013 Tucker Mullin St. Anselm
2014 Jeffrey Reppucci Holy Cross
2015 Brittany Ammerman Wisconsin
2016 Chris Dylewski Air Force
2017 Danny Divis St. Michael's
Justin McKenzie St. Michael's
2018 Sidney Peters Minnesota
2019 Jake Bunz[2] Wisconsin
2020 Amanda Conger[3] Saint Anselm Hawks
2021 Delaney Wolf Saint Mary's University Cardinals
2022 Josh Kosack Union
2023 Gabbie Hughes Minnesota Duluth
2024 Dylan Lugris Penn State

Source[4]

References

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  1. ^ "The Hockey Humanitarian Award | History". hockeyhumanitarian.org. Retrieved 2023-02-13.
  2. ^ "Jake Bunz from the University of Wisconsin was honored as the 2019 recipient of the Hockey Humanitarian Award". ncaa.com. 2020-02-06. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
  3. ^ "Saint Anselm's Amanda Conger named 2020 Hockey Humanitarian Award". ncaa.com. 2021-04-12. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
  4. ^ "Hockey Humanitarian Award | Recipients". hockeyhumanitarian.org. Retrieved 2023-02-12.