Adam Fox: Hockeydb| Trade| Flames| Injury| Net Worth

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Adam Fox. 24-year-old defense d. New York Rangers New York Rangers. Today we will discuss about Adam Fox: Hockeydb| Trade| Flames| Injury| Net Worth

Adam Fox: Hockeydb| Trade| Flames| Injury| Net Worth

Adam Fox (born February 17, 1998) is an American professional ice hockey defenseman for the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League (NHL).[1] Fox was selected by the Calgary Flames, 66th overall, in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft. In 2021, Fox won the James Norris Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s best defender, joining Bobby Orr as only two players in NHL history to win the award before his third NHL season.

Born February 17, 1998 (age 24)
Jericho, New York, U.S.
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 181 lb (82 kg; 12 st 13 lb)
Position Defense
Shoots Right
NHL team New York Rangers
National team  United States
NHL Draft 66th overall, 2016
Calgary Flames
Playing career 2019–present

Hockeydb

Adam Fox: Hockeydb| Trade| Flames| Injury| Net Worth

Adam Fox (born February 17, 1998) is an American professional ice hockey defenseman for the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League (NHL).[1] Fox was selected by the Calgary Flames, 66th overall, in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft. In 2021, Fox won the James Norris Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s best defender, joining Bobby Orr as only two players in NHL history to win the award before his third NHL season.

He played two seasons in the US National Team Development Program, and finished with the record for most assists in one season (in 2015-16) and most assists in a career (in 2014–16). He played collegiate ice hockey for Harvard University, leading all of the nation’s NCAA defenders in assists and points in his freshman season, and leading all of the nation’s defenses in points per game and assists in his junior season. In June 2018, Calgary traded Fox’s NHL rights to the Carolina Hurricanes, who traded him to the New York Rangers in April 2019. He dropped out of college a year ago and made his NHL debut for the Rangers in 2019. In his rookie season, he tied the knot. All NHL rookies were ranked second among defensemen in goals and third in assists and points.

Trade

Adam Fox: Hockeydb| Trade| Flames| Injury| Net Worth

New York Rangers General Manager Jeff Gorton announced today that the team has acquired defenseman Adam Fox from the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for their second-round pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft and a conditional third-round pick in the 2020 NHL Entry Draft.

Fox, 21, skated in 33 games with Harvard University last season, recording nine goals and 39 assists for 48 points, with a plus-23 rating and 14 penalty minutes. He was named a finalist for the Hobby Baker Award as the top player in collegiate hockey in 2018-19, and was also named a First Team All-American. Fox established collegiate career-highs during this past season in several categories, including goals, assists, points, and plus/minus ratings. He led the NCAA in assists and was fourth in the NCAA in points in 2018-19; He ranks second among NCAA defense personnel in points, behind only Hobby Baker Award winner Kale Makar (49). In addition, Fox led the NCAA in assists per game (1.18) and points per game (1.45) during the previous season. He also led all players in ECAC Hockey by total points as well as in ECAC Hockey Conference games in 2018–19 (33 points in 22 intra-conference games).

Flames

What was consistent across the board was the Adam Fox factor. With Fox not signing an NHL contract in Calgary mainly because of Fox’s involvement in the deal, Fox has become arguably the best player in the deal. Winning the Norris Trophy last season, Fox would have the threat for several years in a row to win the prize.

The Calgary Flames have Noah Hannifin and Lindholm to show for it, and the Carolina Hurricanes have two prospects from the deal that also sent Fox to New York. Both teams don’t have Fox, but they are away empty handed.

What constantly cropped up in the Flames’ discussions were the situation around Fox, his draft selection, and his reluctance to sign a contract in Calgary. It made us wonder how this is possible, is it reasonable, and how the Flames and other NHL teams might be able to avoid it in the future.

Injury

Adam Fox said he feels 100 percent healthy and is ready to return to the Rangers lineup against the Bruins on Tuesday after an upper body injury left him out of the last three games ahead of the All-Star weekend was. The defenseman also had to miss out on All-Star festivities.

It was the first injured reserve stint of the third-year player’s career. Fox had missed just one game last season before this injury, when he recorded a false positive COVID-19 test and was ruled out of the March 15 competition against the Flyers.

Net Worth

We’ve seen some pretty big contracts signed recently by NHL defensemen from Quinn Hughes to Ryan Pulak, and just today Charlie McAvoy in Boston. The Bruins’ mainstay signed an extension that would earn them $9.5 million per season for eight years starting with the 2022–23 campaign.

McAvoy is worth every penny on that contract, but his new agreement brings up an intriguing idea: Is Adam Fox going to get $10 million per season on his next contract?

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