Photo Credit: Maddie Meyer/Getty Images
Lehigh Valley Phantoms Head Coach in Ian Laperrière said of Morgan Frost, “He (Morgan Frost) was physical,” Laperrière said. “I just talked to him before I got up here and he felt great. He was a little bit tired, like I gave him quite a bit of ice-time, which I wanted to test him in different situations I would like to see him in, and management would like to see him too. I thought he looked great…He’s such a smart player, he can adjust. I’m just happy for him that he put the work in.”
Morgan Frost missed an entire developmental season in 2020 due to an injury, so in 2021-22 he transitioned back and forth between the Lehigh Valley Phantoms and the Flyers. He had consistency problems and timing issues throughout his NHL career, mainly due to missing time and a developmental stand still. However, that was then and this past season amassed 46 points in 81 games played (19g,27a). He was consistent, for the most part, and really showed promise for this young rebuilding Flyers team.
Frost is arguably one of the most talented forwards the Flyers have at this time. He can make something out of nothing, as he has good on-ice awareness. Frost has a ton of skill, and his hands remind of Claude Giroux’s with the way he razzles and passes the puck.
The good thing is, Frost should gain much confidence after a very good season, finally, for the orange and black. It would be worth it for the Flyers to sign Frost to a four or five year deal based off his production in 2022-23. This would be a confidence boosting contract for the young 24-year-old and one the Flyers would hope to be cost saving for a potential 50-70 point producer, possibly more.
It would make more sense for the Flyers to either do a two-year, four-year, or five-year deal, not a three-year deal. With Frost only being 24-years-old. A new three-year deal would take Frost out of Restricted Free Agent status (27-years-old) when the contract would expire, thus making a two-year, four-year, or five-year deal would make sense for the orange and black. After a four or five year deal would expire he would become an Unrestricted Free Agent, and a three-year deal would do the same, so why not extend Frost long-term?
“I probably feel the best I’ve ever felt in my pro career.” – Morgan Frost said following the Toronto game earlier in the season
To be honest, he looked loose and that the pressure of succeeding was off his shoulders at least for the season. It appeared that he wasn’t concerned about making a mistake, as he was playing with James van Riemsdyk and Owen Tippett at one point. Finally, Frost had a cohesive line to work with it appeared, as the trio dominated in games at times throughout the course of the season.
Frost was oozing with confidence after a benching in Toronto. He became physical, and more often than not made tape to tape passes.
One area that John Tortorella has excelled at is communication with the youth. The youth appeared to have taken another step, especially with Noah Cates, Owen Tippett, Cam York, and Frost. “I had great chemistry with my linemates. They made my job easier,” Frost said last year.
Frost is a young player that is supposed to have top six abilities. Former Flyers’ General Manager Chuck Fletcher originally said he didn’t want Frost to be a yo-yo, and if he was recalled to the Flyers then Frost would be up for good. Well, well, well, he was treated like a yo-yo at times in 2021-22, so much for that. In hindsight what it did was give Frost more experience, and that’s something that Frost didn’t take lightly, “Obviously, there’s highs and lows during the season where maybe you’re not really sure if you feel that way, but I think towards the end of the year, definitely I’m starting to feel a lot more comfortable,” said Frost. “I think at this point, I can say I feel confident saying I feel like an NHL player. I’m happy about that.”
His confidence is back, and confidence is key for everyone no matter what you do in life. After only playing in a handful of organized hockey games in a year and a half due to his prior injury. It was understandable for Frost to tighten his stick, or put a lot of pressure for him to succeed offensively in 2021-22. It appears the lack of confidence appears to be a thing of the past for Frost, and that can only benefit the orange and black moving forward. Banking on a player with top six abilities would be beneficial in this case, especially for how talented Frost is.
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Followed Frosty since early in his OHL days. Every year, at every level, from OHL, AHL, to the NHL he only improves on his substantial talents. From primarily offensive driven- his OHL days,to playing now a more complete game, odds are he will transition into a top 4 player. One fact, just look at his faceoff wins against some of the top paid players his age in the NHL. Many nights Morgan topped them. As a long time, close observer of the game, the Flyers are nuts if they don’t lock him, at minimum, into a medium term contract.