Prospect Info: Cole Brown (#164 - 6th Round - 2023 Draft)

Nubmer6

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Jul 14, 2013
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Guttersniped

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More guides and stuff (all the text from the screen grabs is quoted so people don’t go blind trying to read it).

Didn’t make 112 ranked prospect list
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How are players rated?
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Cole was selected in the third round of the 2021 OHL Priority Selection Draft by the Hamilton Bulldogs out of the York-Simcoe Express U16 program. Cole had a quiet but effective rookie season, considering he was playing for the OHL Champion Hamilton Bulldogs, but that ice time was reduced after the trade deadline and he saw only two games in the OHL Playoffs. This season he has taken on a top six role with the Bulldogs getting a regular shift on the power play and taking the next step in his junior career.


The first thing you notice about Brown is the great size he possesses. He has a huge frame and you'll find very quickly that he utilizes it at every possible opportunity. Cole loves to play the body and finishes his checks with aggression and power. He is effective along the wall and wins a good percentage of battles for a second year junior player.


Cole also has a powerful shot but would benefit from a little more accuracy which would also make him more confident in using it more frequently.


Brown projects as a power forward who would not have the skill to produce on the top two lines in the NHL. His strength seems to be understanding who he is as a player; which is a physical winger who uses his size and strength to impact the game. His greatest deficiency as a player is his skating ability. It is sometimes understandable why a player of his size struggles in this area, but to become a real threat to play in the NHL this area of his game needs to see big improvements in order for him to reach his potential.

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GAME REPORTS

J.D. Burke: April 2nd, 2023 - Barrie Colts vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

I'm not sure I would characterize this as a bad game by Brown. He played big minutes for Hamilton in their top-six, generated his fair share of transition plays, and even finished with a goal, going to the net and snapping a rebound home. I'm not sure that I saw anything to suggest NHL upside though. Every one of Brown's tools looked about average to me. Start there. I'm not sure that I saw any high-level creativity with the puck or advanced reads in any part of the game either. Brown attacked in a straight line, at a single speed, often against pressure, and displayed no real sense of planning or problem-solving ability. I'm not sure that Brown is a pick for me.

Mitchell Brown: March 17th, 2023 - Hamilton Bulldogs vs. Flint Firebirds - OHL

Another really solid, projectable game from Brown. He's deceptive, patient, and never pushes play straight ahead needlessly.

As soon as the defender closes in, he cuts back or inside. Went under a defender's stick while cutting inside for a chance.

Manipulated a defender by setting up the deke at an angle for another look. Showed handling skill and manipulation ability, although his hands can be too slow to pull off more advanced moves. A hand-worker on the forecheck and backcheck, too.

There are blind plays and he's not quick, but he has enough skills to become an NHLer. Probably a depth player, but there's a chance for a bit more with his intelligent, proactive game.

Mitchell Brown: March 2nd 2023 - Hamilton Bulldogs vs. Barrie Colts - OHL

A power play hat trick for Brown. The last two were wristers from the slot, attacking the middle of the rush before firing. He's a bit unaware of backpressure at times, but fully reads front pressure. He exploits pass gaps by skating to the middle. He exploits passive gaps by cutting back and looking for the trailing option. He makes quick passing reads but can also draw out a possession and find a teammate sprinting the slot. Since he's not entirely aware of his surroundings, back pressure will occasionally force him into a bad pass or hastened decisions after cutting back. He's sluggish out of stops, which doesn't help.

The skating lacks depth and subsequently power in general. But he's fluid with the puck. He's a pick, especially because he already brings some defence through his backtracking and off-puck awareness. Could play bottom-six minutes and has the tools to score a bit in the right situation.

Mitchell Brown: February 26th, 2023 - Sudbury Wolves vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

Another solid game from Brown. He reads space and chooses the appropriate attack. He cuts inside when the defender's too close to the boards or passively gapped. He cuts back when space runs out. In one sequence, he used a two-foot stop and accelerated to the middle for a chance. Uses lateral passes to bypass defenders off the rush. Spaces the offensive zone and gets open between defenders. The shot looks like an NHL tool. Shot in-stride and hammered a clean one-timer off the post. Skating's a question. Edges are somewhat developed and achieves proper lower body flexion in brief moments, but his crossovers lack any sort of crossunder and the stride falls apart fast. He's an end-of-board candidate.

Mitchell Brown: February 25th, 2023 - Kingston Frontenacs vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

This was a completely different game than the last Fronts-Bulldogs game. Brown was everywhere. He grabbed a couple of early-game deflections by skating his routes and stopping in space, winning body positioning on the defender when necessary. He also flashed some manipulation ability. He worked laterally to bait the defender to push, then exposed the puck. As the defender reached, he passed under their stick to a teammate rushing the net. Connected with a look-off cross-slot pass off the rush to nearly set up another chance. Knew the next play upon getting possession. Didn't force plays ahead, preferring to cut back when necessary. Some of his ideas failed and he's not mechanically advanced. But he looks like a pick. Intelligence, deception, and some defensive ability.

Mitchell Brown: February 20th, 2023 - Kitchener Rangers vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

Another intriguing game from Brown. He's a refined defensive player already. He was always above the puck. From there, he anticipates, angles, and seals off the puck carrier. Anticipates passes and closes lanes. Supports down low. With the puck, he's a bit simple. He flashed a bit of weight shift ability and handling skill in a late-game rush, but mostly makes quick passes in transition. Off-puck's where he shines more. He gets open, rushes the slot at the right moments, and even stick-lifted a defender just as the puck came through, effectively using the opponent's stick to deflect the puck into the back of the net. It's not flashy, but he seems like a decent bet to play, and there's a bit upside here.

Mitchell Brown: February 19th, 2023 - Kingston Frontenacs vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

Searched long and hard for Brown in this game, and there wasn't much of note. He had major difficulty in transition. Lots of chip-and-no-chance-chase plays and turning back into pressure with better options. He has the ideas - cut back, pass laterally

- but nothing clicked. He's reasonably fluid and has some playmaking ideas, but everything's just simple plays. And he's not a space creator off-puck or an advanced player along the boards. Didn't look like a pick in this game.

Mitchell Brown: February 11th, 2023 - Peterborough Petes vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

Brown didn't achieve a ton this game, but he continued to show projectable habits. He doesn't force plays up the boards and uses his teammates effectively. Lots of strong defensive plays. Showed shooting and passing skill, including a look off pass to the middle. The shot's a clear NHL projection, a 5.5 at least. He can really rip the puck, he hides his release, and has a variety of releases. Curious to watch more. He looked like a mid-rounder in this game. Not dynamic, but smart.

David St-Louis: January 20th, 2023 - Sudbury Wolves vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

I didn't see a whole lot from Brown in this game. Only the size and skating combination. He can make some passing plays, but at lower pace. Ideally, he would be able to spot his options as he drove down the wing at full flight. But just that combination of speed and frame could get him drafted.

Mitchell Brown: January 14th, 2023 - Hamilton Bulldogs vs. Kingston Frontenacs - OHL

A fascinating game from Brown. It wasn't much of a creation performance, but rather one that showed NHL details. Instead of rushing the puck forward, he'd press the middle, then either continue if the defender relented or cut back if they stepped up. Quick passes to the middle led to opportunities, including his assist. Always tracked the play after passing, following up loose pucks and ripping away possession from opponents. His game was mostly quick, short plays and he wasn't manipulating opponents, but he showed enough skill and defensive ability to suggest an NHL prospect.

David St-Louis: January 13th, 2023 - Ottawa 67's vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

I didn't see much in terms of sense for Brown in this game, but the tools are interesting. He's 6-foot-3 and has the speed to play in the NHL. He's more of an offensive player at this stage, a solo driver and creator, but he has the handling and passing skills to develop as a playmaking. I liked his pace. He caught pucks in movement and attacked down the ice.

Mitchell Brown: October 8th, 2023 - Oshawa Generals vs. Hamilton Bulldogs - OHL

Brown scored with a backfoot one-timer off the rush, beating the goalie across the crease. A really tricky shot, certainly an NHL one. This was more of a consistent game rather than a standout moments performance, however. Brown does a lot right. He gets open through movement and timing. He moves pucks east-west and delays at the right moments. Backtracks, gets above the puck, times his pokes. No playmaking shown, but just a solid all-around performance. Reasonably fluid, too. He could be a pick.
(Game reports quoted under spoiler!)
SCOUTING REPORT

Cole Brown isn't the usual 6-foot-3 forward prospect. He's not a punishing checker or power forward-type. Instead, he's a smooth skilled winger with point-producing upside at the next level.

With a precise one-timer and powerful in-stride wrister, Brown shoots like an NHLer.

To use his shot, he reads the momentum of opponents and occasionally dictates it. He cuts inside when defenders give him the opportunity, beats them down the outside, and cuts back when they lean in. Even more excitingly, he pulls defenders towards him, then dekes through them to create a lane to the net.

Brown's patient, letting plays develop before passing. That style in the NHL requires walking a fine line, and he veers on the lower pace end, allowing back pressure to disrupt his plays.

By skating into opponents' routes, winning positioning, and looking over his shoulder more, he'd create even more opportunities.

Developing a deeper, more consistent skating posture will help, too

With those skills comes Brown's hard-working, detailed off-puck game. Given all of those skills, he could earn a spot inside a team's bottom-six.

Out of 300 ranked prospects
Have his height/weight wrong *shrug*
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Brown, a tall, lanky winger, uses his imposing size and long reach to excel along the walls in all three zones of the ice. With smooth strides and impressive puckhan-ding abilities, he exhibits the unique skill of utilizing his length to retrieve loose pucks and shield them effectively from opponents.

These traits are reinforced by his capacity to find open spaces in the offensive zone and assert his presence in front of the net.

Although a thinner frame could be viewed as a drawback, Brown shows surprising strength on his edges, permitting him to maintain possession and create scoring opportunities, despite a noted lack of explo-siveness. His offensive strategy currently lacks a level of assertiveness, often suffering from hesitation in his decision-mak-ing, which detracts from his chances. By enhancing his foot-speed and adopting a more aggressive attitude with the puck, Brown could witness significant growth.

His defensive instincts are admirable, proficiently disrupting passes and seizing upon turnovers; however, his physical impact is inconsistently executed, diminishing his effectiveness on the forecheck and along the boards in his own end. This inconsistency extends to his scoring chance gen-eration, which is hampered by a lack of assertiveness in attacking the middle. If he concentrates on developing his lower body strength and incorporating more quickness,

Brown has the potential to evolve into a formidable scoring threat and dependable player at even strength. His skill set and athleticism make him an attractive prospect.

With the right development, this promising prospect could evolve into a vital asset for any team in the league.

April 2023
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Brown is a tall, lanky winger who utilizes his size to excel along the walls in all three zones. Surprisingly, he moves well for a taller, thinner player, using his long legs and reach to retrieve loose pucks or poke them away from opposing players. His play along the walls is impressive, as he effectively uses his frame to protect the puck or relies on his reach to steal pucks from the opposition. However, the rest of his game still needs some refinement. Brown is a very athletic player with the potential to be a strategic mismatch once his game fully develops. To reach his full potential, he needs to trust himself more and be more aggressive with the puck on his stick. Currently, he hesitates with his decision-making, allowing the opposition to close in on him and neutralize his scoring chances. If he can add explosiveness to his skating and learn to trust his instincts, he has the potential for significant improvement. The physical tools are already there, and teams may be willing to take a chance on him in the hope that his skills continue to develop. I see his potential as a bottom-six player, and with added weight to his frame, he can become a quality forechecking winger who excels in the cycle game. In the 2023 draft, I would consider selecting him in the late rounds and allowing him to further develop his game and physicality. With time and development, he could evolve into a solid five-on-five forechecking forward who also contributes on the penalty kill.
March 2023
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Brown is a big, rangy winger who effectively uses his long reach to protect the puck and possesses impressive puckhandling abilities and top speed for a young player with his imposing size. He has long, smooth strides and generates great speed in open ice.

While improving his foot speed and explosiveness would enhance his acceleration and short-area quickness, Brown's strength on his edges and ability to protect the puck under physical pressure allow him to drive possession and create offense. He keeps it simple with the puck and excels at finding soft areas of ice in the offensive zone, as well as establishing positioning in front of the net. His stickhandling skills and ability to handle the puck away from his body enable him to drive wide around defenders on transition chances and create problems for opponents during the cycle. Brown displays solid defensive instincts, using his stick to disrupt passes and capitalize on turnovers. However, he does not consistently utilize his size to make a physical impact, which limits his effectiveness on the forecheck and along the boards in his own end. His inconsistent scoring chance generation may be attributed to a lack of aggressiveness attacking the middle lane.

Improving his lower body strength and adding more quickness to his feet could help him become a greater scoring threat or a reliable player at even strength.

Brown's athleticism and skill make him an attractive prospect for a potential bottom-six winger in the NHL, but his skating and aggressiveness on offense will need to improve for him to reach that level.

He didn’t make the 224 ranked prospects
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Consistency is the biggest thing holding back Brown's game currently. A big winger, Brown is a solid north-south attacker. He has good speed without the puck and with his length, he is a valuable asset in puck pursuit. He knows his role is to keep pucks alive down low and to find his way to the net and he shows promise as a goal scorer with soft hands in tight. With the puck, his game slows down and he can struggle to keep pace or beat defenders. His physical approach also lacks consistency, leading him to be invisible some nights. The physical tools are intriguing. The finished product remains a huge mystery.

If the small area skill and first step quickness improve, Brown could be a middle six complementary piece. If not, he probably tops out as a good junior player. - BO

Out of 240 ranked prospects
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Offensive winger. Average skating ability. Long, fluid strides with good speed for his size once in full stride but lacks that explosive top gear to beat defenders with speed. Is a straight line attacker who looks to get to the net. Uses his size in front to screen the goalie. Has a good hard wrist shot that he gets on net with good accuracy. Quick release. Nice hands in transition, able to beat a defender one-on-one to gain the zone. Tends to slow down a bit while carrying the puck in transition. Good playmaking ability.

Crisp and on-the-tape passes. Good vision to find the open man. Has a big frame but doesn't engage much physically. Capable of laying out the opposition and would like to see him us that ability more. Can disappear for parts of a game. Has a long reach and uses his stick to disrupt plays. In the defensive zone has good positioning but would like to see him close some gaps more quickly.

Played on the powerplay, where he set up on the half-wall to present himself as a shot threat. Needs to establish more of an identity, whether that is as a two-way winger or a forechecker. Raw prospect but projects as a middle-six winger at the NHL level.
 
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evnted

Registered User
Apr 14, 2016
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Caught some Bulldogs action as well. Brown has interesting qualities. The first thing that really stood out to me was his size+hustle combo. That isn't to say he's a really high end skater, but this kid is always moving his feet. He's constantly buzzing around the ice trying to close off lanes in his own zone and open them up offensively, which is certainly not the most common thing to see for a kid of his size. And contrary to what you might expect, he comes off as pretty light on his skates as well; this isn't some 6'3" beast charging at you, it's quick burst, fairly agile movement. I was also pretty impressed by his off-puck stick work. Super disruptive, even if he wasn't gaining possession off every poke attempt he made, he still had a pretty decent success rate in terms of making contact with the puck and forcing the opposition to reset.

Passing game can be sloppy, think he reads lanes well enough and has a surprisingly good layer of creativity to his approach, he's just way too reckless with some of what he attempts and it can result in unforced turnovers. The shot is nice. Quick, accurate, and off his stick pretty fast. Good ability to open himself up and even drive some tougher scoring lanes. Calling him a sniper feels too generous but there's some capable goal scoring upside here. Puck skills are a little bit of a work in progress. The intent is there, I see him wanting to pull off some pretty dazzling moves at times, and while he'll generally be close he's not quite there yet. Some of it feels like he's just getting a little ahead of himself, which to some degree may be exciting because it could be foreshadowing a sharp development spike in the future if his ability catches up to his intent, but for the time being he's occasionally mishandling passes that he really shouldn't be.

The big thing I want to talk about is that I find there's a pretty significant disconnect between the eye test and his actual impact on the game. Like I mentioned, I constantly see him moving, he's always aware of where the play's at, and I like that a lot, but you'll have shift after shift where he's not actually accomplishing anything, it just looks like he's doing cardio out there. Again, I want to make sure I emphasize, I don't find him to be checked out or anything, and to the contrary I really do think he's invested in what's going on and generally aware of who he's supposed to be covering, there can just be some pretty long stretches of play watching that don't turn into anything unless the puck goes his way. Some of this could just be a really conservative mentality, he's picking his spots well, supporting his teammates, and the other team isn't exploiting his side of the ice or anything, but I'd really like to see him take that next to step to get even more involved and more deliberately take hold of play beyond just trying to maintain a lane or something. Play tighter to his man, get more physically engaged along the boards, challenge puck carriers more aggressively. He's simply not taking advantage of his size and compete anywhere even remotely enough at this point, so I know why our staff would describe him as an upside swing, but it's also pretty obvious why he went at 164 as well.

So, on the complete opposite end of the spectrum from what I said about Cheslock, I actually think we might know rather quickly whether Brown is going to be worth watching or not. To me, this is gonna be a flip switch thing. I think we either open up the season seeing him have a pretty immediate, tangible application of his hustle, his processor, his skill, and we start getting excited, or it's right back to square one with him being more aware of, than actually engaged in, play, and he starts to look like a depth piece. I'm not asking for him to become a star or anything, rather, I think there's a lot of room to grow in terms of playing opposing forwards harder, pressuring the net more, and taking away space more aggressively than just by being physically present in a passing lane.

In the simplest possible terms, despite me liking his awareness and the baseline template of his game, he needs to unlock a much higher level of consistency to his shift to shift impact. He seemed to have a decent response to the added minutes he got as the Bulldogs sold off their higher end talent last year, so my hope is that he carries some of that momentum we saw and more explicitly translates all the good from the eye test into actual results.
 
Last edited:

Nubmer6

Sleep is a poor substitute for caffeine
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Jul 14, 2013
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Caught some Bulldogs action as well. Brown has interesting qualities. The first thing that really stood out to me was his size+hustle combo. That isn't to say he's a really high end skater, but this kid is always moving his feet. He's constantly buzzing around the ice trying to close off lanes in his own zone and open them up offensively, which is certainly not the most common thing to see for a kid of his size. And contrary to what you might expect, he comes off as pretty light on his skates as well; this isn't some 6'3" beast charging at you, it's quick burst, fairly agile movement. I was also pretty impressed by his off-puck stick work. Super disruptive, even if he wasn't gaining possession off every poke attempt he made, he still had a pretty decent success rate in terms of making contact with the puck and forcing the opposition to reset. Passing game can be sloppy, think he reads lanes well enough and has a surprisingly good layer of creativity to his approach, he's just way too reckless with some of what he attempts and it can result in unforced turnovers. The shot is nice. Quick, accurate, and off his stick pretty fast. Good ability to open himself up and even drive some tougher scoring lanes. Calling him a sniper feels too generous but there's some capable goal scoring upside here. Puck skills are a little bit of a work in progress. The intent is there, I see him wanting to pull off some pretty dazzling moves at times, and while he'll generally be close he's not quite there yet. Some of it feels like he's just getting a little ahead of himself, which to some degree may be exciting because it could be foreshadowing a sharp development spike in the future if his ability catches up to his intent, but for the time being he's occasionally mishandling passes that he really shouldn't be. The big thing I want to talk about is that I find there's a pretty significant disconnect between the eye test and his actual impact on the game. Like I mentioned, I constantly see him moving, he's always aware of where the play's at, and I like that a lot, but you'll have shift after shift where he's not actually accomplishing anything, it just looks like he's doing cardio out there. Again, I want to make sure I emphasize, I don't find him to be checked out or anything, and to the contrary I really do think he's invested in what's going on and generally aware of who he's supposed to be covering, there can just be some pretty long stretches of play watching that don't turn into anything unless the puck goes his way. Some of this could just be a really conservative mentality, he's picking his spots well, supporting his teammates, and the other team isn't exploiting his side of the ice or anything, but I'd really like to see him take that next to step to get even more involved and more deliberately take hold of play beyond just trying to maintain a lane or something. Play tighter to his man, get more physically engaged along the boards, challenge puck carriers more aggressively. He's simply not taking advantage of his size and compete anywhere even remotely enough at this point, so I know why our staff would describe him as an upside swing, but it's also pretty obvious why he went at 164 as well. So, on the complete opposite end of the spectrum from what I said about Cheslock, I actually think we might know rather quickly whether Brown is going to be worth watching or not. To me, this is gonna be a flip switch thing. I think we either open up the season seeing him have a pretty immediate, tangible application of his hustle, his processor, his skill, and we start getting excited, or it's right back to square one with him being more aware of, than actually engaged in, play, and he starts to look like a depth piece. I'm not asking for him to become a star or anything, rather, I think there's a lot of room to grow in terms of playing opposing forwards harder, pressuring the net more, and taking away space more aggressively than just by being physically present in a passing lane. In the simplest possible terms, despite me liking his awareness and the baseline template of his game, he needs to unlock a much higher level of consistency to his shift to shift impact. He seemed to have a decent response to the added minutes he got as the Bulldogs sold off their higher end talent last year, so my hope is that he carries some of that momentum we saw and more explicitly translates all the good from the eye test into actual results.
Holy wall of text! :)

Holy informative post :)
 

glenwo2

LINDY RUFF NEEDS VIAGRA!!
Oct 18, 2008
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Caught some Bulldogs action as well. Brown has interesting qualities. The first thing that really stood out to me was his size+hustle combo. That isn't to say he's a really high end skater, but this kid is always moving his feet. He's constantly buzzing around the ice trying to close off lanes in his own zone and open them up offensively, which is certainly not the most common thing to see for a kid of his size. And contrary to what you might expect, he comes off as pretty light on his skates as well; this isn't some 6'3" beast charging at you, it's quick burst, fairly agile movement. I was also pretty impressed by his off-puck stick work. Super disruptive, even if he wasn't gaining possession off every poke attempt he made, he still had a pretty decent success rate in terms of making contact with the puck and forcing the opposition to reset. Passing game can be sloppy, think he reads lanes well enough and has a surprisingly good layer of creativity to his approach, he's just way too reckless with some of what he attempts and it can result in unforced turnovers. The shot is nice. Quick, accurate, and off his stick pretty fast. Good ability to open himself up and even drive some tougher scoring lanes. Calling him a sniper feels too generous but there's some capable goal scoring upside here. Puck skills are a little bit of a work in progress. The intent is there, I see him wanting to pull off some pretty dazzling moves at times, and while he'll generally be close he's not quite there yet. Some of it feels like he's just getting a little ahead of himself, which to some degree may be exciting because it could be foreshadowing a sharp development spike in the future if his ability catches up to his intent, but for the time being he's occasionally mishandling passes that he really shouldn't be. The big thing I want to talk about is that I find there's a pretty significant disconnect between the eye test and his actual impact on the game. Like I mentioned, I constantly see him moving, he's always aware of where the play's at, and I like that a lot, but you'll have shift after shift where he's not actually accomplishing anything, it just looks like he's doing cardio out there. Again, I want to make sure I emphasize, I don't find him to be checked out or anything, and to the contrary I really do think he's invested in what's going on and generally aware of who he's supposed to be covering, there can just be some pretty long stretches of play watching that don't turn into anything unless the puck goes his way. Some of this could just be a really conservative mentality, he's picking his spots well, supporting his teammates, and the other team isn't exploiting his side of the ice or anything, but I'd really like to see him take that next to step to get even more involved and more deliberately take hold of play beyond just trying to maintain a lane or something. Play tighter to his man, get more physically engaged along the boards, challenge puck carriers more aggressively. He's simply not taking advantage of his size and compete anywhere even remotely enough at this point, so I know why our staff would describe him as an upside swing, but it's also pretty obvious why he went at 164 as well. So, on the complete opposite end of the spectrum from what I said about Cheslock, I actually think we might know rather quickly whether Brown is going to be worth watching or not. To me, this is gonna be a flip switch thing. I think we either open up the season seeing him have a pretty immediate, tangible application of his hustle, his processor, his skill, and we start getting excited, or it's right back to square one with him being more aware of, than actually engaged in, play, and he starts to look like a depth piece. I'm not asking for him to become a star or anything, rather, I think there's a lot of room to grow in terms of playing opposing forwards harder, pressuring the net more, and taking away space more aggressively than just by being physically present in a passing lane. In the simplest possible terms, despite me liking his awareness and the baseline template of his game, he needs to unlock a much higher level of consistency to his shift to shift impact. He seemed to have a decent response to the added minutes he got as the Bulldogs sold off their higher end talent last year, so my hope is that he carries some of that momentum we saw and more explicitly translates all the good from the eye test into actual results.
7re58u.gif


(Do love the write-up, though. lol)
 

evnted

Registered User
Apr 14, 2016
623
767
Holy wall of text! :)

Holy informative post :)

7re58u.gif


(Do love the write-up, though. lol)

lol ya i didnt mean to go that hard on it. i was mainly just gonna focus on the shift to shift thing but when i went back over it i realized i wasnt really describing him as a player that much and figured i needed to add a tools/style overview beforehand to paint a clearer picture
 

Guttersniped

I like goalies who stop the puck
Sponsor
Dec 20, 2018
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lol ya i didnt mean to go that hard on it. i was mainly just gonna focus on the shift to shift thing but when i went back over it i realized i wasnt really describing him as a player that much and figured i needed to add a tools/style overview beforehand to paint a clearer picture

It was a great write up.

I mean, paragraphs are our friends, but it’s very informative, I appreciate all of your contributions on the new prospects. Good stuff all around.
 

evnted

Registered User
Apr 14, 2016
623
767
had a chance to check out his game today. counting stats have been downright awful thus far (17pt in 32gp) but i wanted to see if there was more to the story. here are some thoughts:

- this was a tale of two different games, the first half being very poor, and the second half looking a bit more competent
- first ~30 minutes showcased a concerning lack of pace to his game. that whole "i think he looks engaged hes just not moving his feet enough" impression i originally had swayed pretty sharply toward the "hes not actually doing anything" side
- even when he did hustle, it didnt turn into much. for example, there was one instance where i thought he pursued the puck well off a dump in, but once he came up on it, he kinda just planted himself along the boards and didnt bother to make a play on the puck. no stick check, no fight for possession. in fact, i caught him almost backing away from the puck battle as it went on
- didnt seem like he had his head in this one for a while. easily baited defensively, sloppy playmaking, struggles handling the puck even without being pressured, just not very good
- im pretty sure he didnt have an offensive zone touch until midway through the 2nd, which funny enough immediately turned into an assist. his linemate did the majority of the work to gain possession, but in credit to brown, he made a very slick pass from below the goal line to set up an easy tap in
- i dont know if this woke him up or what, but i found him hustling more and looking much more confident on the puck in most of his subsequent shifts. had a threatening wrister off the rush the immediate shift after, and he looked good as the primary shooting option on PP2 a little bit later in the period. nothing super impressive, but a better effort for sure
-he largely carried over the late 2nd showing into the 3rd. little bit of sloppy puck management crept back into his game, but he was still assertive on the puck, actively trying to open up lanes, and more competitive fighting for loose pucks

this game didnt really give me the answers i thought i was gonna get. the stat line is so bad that i can only assume hes played most of the season looking like he did in the first chunk of the game, but this wasnt the outright disaster i anticipated it being (or thought it was during the first 30 minutes lol). bulldogs arent a super high scoring team, so i dont know if we can expect some big production rebound in the second half of the season (and its not like he was THAT amazing once he got going) but any sort of consistent compete down the stretch would be nice
 

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