

A series of “small bruises and bumps” had been the extent of his injury history, hardly ever missing more than one game with any one injury before. After all, he said he had never been through an injury that kept him out that long. I didn't get off to the start I really wanted to but I think now some of that is starting to pay off for me.” The recovery processįrost was candid about that slow start over the phone, as well as his recovery.īeing just 21-years old at the time of his dislocated left shoulder surgery last season, Frost didn't realize the journey he'd be embarking on in his comeback. “I've put in a lot of hard work over the summer. “The coaching staff has done a really good job with us,” Frost went on to say. He's also firing off just a tick above two shots per game for a total of 34 shots, good for second on the team, and has a powerplay goal to his credit through the first 16 games. Only leading the team in scoring with 15 points (3 G, 12 A). So what exactly is Frost doing with the Phantoms to boost his resume for whenever Chuck Fletcher and the coaching staff decide to pull from the minor league system? “You want to be the guy that gets that call.” “Just do your thing down here and keep getting better everyday and find consistency so that it looks good if something does happen up there,” Frost explained. He wants to be that guy, and he's doing everything he can to be exactly that. After being among the final cuts in training camp, the Ontario native is ready for whenever that call-up comes.

I see it, but you don't want to overthink about that.”Įxcept, unlike us - whose livelihoods aren't affected with the news out of the Flyers building - Frost’s career is impacted when injuries begin striking the big club and scoring woes start to pile up. “It's obviously kind of tough to block that type of stuff out. “It adds motivation,” Frost admitted over the phone.

