One of the flashiest offensive defensemen within the entire 2009-born North American class; watching Brock Cripps play is always a treat. His puck skills coupled with his lateral mobility, edgework, and power make him nearly impossible to contain for the majority of his peers. He can create space for himself so easily as he walks the blueline, evading, deceiving, and challenging puck pursuers 1-on-1 while working with momentum. With magic hands he was able to pull pucks through and around bodies, creep high into the slot, and fire high-quality shots on net, showing off a heavy and hard wrister in the process. The dynamism and creativity on display, along with the speed at which he plays at makes him a weapon at all times when he’s on the ice. Capable of carrying the puck in transition whilst attacking laterally and changing direction, it only takes a few quick crossovers for him to get going up ice, executing plenty of 2-line transition plays throughout the course of a game. Once he hit that top speed, he was very difficult to contain and slow down.
Scouting Report
EVALUATED 06/05/2024
Joel Henderson
Director of Scouting
Event
2024 WHL Draft Final Evaluation
Projection: Top Pair Defender
Projectable Skills: Possession IQ, Offensive manipulation
Development Opportunities: Skating, Escaping pressure with the puck from a standstill
Brock’s understanding of space, timing, and using his inside edges to counter momentum as a puck carrier in motion is high-end. When he can’t escape pressure with his feet, he often protects long enough to make smart passes to teammates. He is at his best when he’s attacking in motion off the rush because he can anticipate, shift, and manipulate forecheckers to continue driving play forward. He is confident through his crossovers and moves well with power. His ability to read body language and manipulate others leads him to high level passes on the PP to set up one-timers on the wings. Tactically he’s as strong as almost anyone in this draft which is why he crushes weaker teams with intelligence and consistency. The thing which could hold him back is his ability to escape pressure when he’s not already in motion. The top teams this year could plan for his strengths and counter them to make sure he had to pass the puck early and take the puck out of his hands at 5on5. A lot of his defensive work is built on that same anticipation to use his stick early to break up plays and follow up with physicality along the boards if he can. His comparables in some aspects include Lukas Dragicevic, Mazden Leslie, Tristen Doyle, and Hudson Thornton.
Skating
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
7.5
Puck Skills
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
9
Hockey IQ
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
9.5
Playmaking
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
9
Scoring
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
9
Physicality
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
7
Defense
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
7.5
Overall
8.36
Scouting Report
EVALUATED 18/04/2024
Joel Henderson
Director of Scouting
Event
N/A
The scoring pace of St. George’s is baffling at this point. Brock is a highly intelligent defenseman who plays with the puck control and decision making in flow of a top-end forward. He’s constantly pushing up the ice, turning away from pressure to find outlets, and uses the strength of his teammates to boldly push himself into scoring space. He’s already found himself in some U18 games playing forward and even taking faceoffs.
Overall
8.36
Scouting Report
EVALUATED 07/03/2024
Joel Henderson
Director of Scouting
Event
John Reid Memorial Tournament
His best attributes come out when he’s forcing players to guess which way he’s going to attack them laterally. Brock rarely moves with the puck without layers of fakes and hesitations to his approach. With his head up, he extends his reach to make space wide and find shot lanes or passing angles across zones. He can control the pick behind his hip pocket, alter his plans on the fly, and step into shooting lanes with passion. I’ve spoken before about how I think Brock falls into the genre of defenders like Lukas Dragocevic and Mazden Lesle. Their best work is done in the offensive zone or in transition. There were moments even against Sask East where Brock got caught stagnant defensively and his defensive instincts are to shot block in lanes rather than always be in front of players. Brock finished off the tournament with 10 points in 5 games, scoring 2 points in every contest.
Overall
8.36
Scouting Report
EVALUATED 03/11/2023
Chase Allen
Regional Scout - Ontario
Event
KINGS OF SPRING NASHVILLE
Our top-ranked defender from the event, Brock Cripps of Western Canada was the most creative, skilled, and smooth defender present. He’s such a powerful skater in all directions, with a great first step he creates plenty of separation, gets defenders turning around, and can open passing lanes to funnel pucks to the middle. His ability to fake, freeze, and jump around his nearest man high in the offensive zone opened plenty of space for him to walk into the slot with and get pucks on net with a snappy release. He can pull and push pucks around opponents in 1-on-1 situations very well, making him even more valuable on the breakout as he was confident, quick, and controlled getting around forecheckers with speed and control. Using mohawk turns, crossovers, pivots, and tight turns, he was able to create separation. The key element to his game that made him so valuable was his courage to skate the puck around the offensive zone as if he were a forward, this really helped him apply greater offensive pressure, pulling in defenders as he worked below the goal line, centering pucks to the middle and creating plenty of shooting opportunities for his teammates in dangerous areas. For his size he put up a great fight in battles as well, shoving opponents off the puck as he angled them towards the boards, along with battling for space in front of his own end to be capable of intercepting passes.
Overall
8.36
Game Reports
EVALUATED
Joel Henderson
Director of Scouting
Game Information
Bauer U15 Elite Invite: St George’s Saints vs Okanagan Hockey Academy
I think I’m developing a sense of Brock’s consistency in his transition efforts and his confidence on a game to game basis. He has an uncanny knack for quick decisions when he senses gaps in that pressure while in motion. It gives him the capacity to have the confidence to skate into a sea of sticks and still adjust to little pokes by changing the passing angle and giving that backhanded saucer to the tape to a teammate who barely squeezed past a defender on the far side. Even the smallest passing windows come across as routine sometimes to him because of that control and sensing of pressure. He finished with a goal and an assist and it came across as a very regular outing for the smart, transition defender. There was one moment where he got caught out of position at his own blueline and was left to reach and hope to not get called for a penalty. Adjusting and owning those moments matter too.
Game Reports
EVALUATED 29/10/2023
Joel Henderson
Director of Scouting
Game Information
BAUER U15 ELITE INVITE: ST GEORGE’S SAINTS VS OKANAGAN HOCKEY ACADEMY
I think I’m developing a sense of Brock’s consistency in his transition efforts and his confidence on a game to game basis. He has an uncanny knack for quick decisions when he senses gaps in that pressure while in motion. It gives him the capacity to have the confidence to skate into a sea of sticks and still adjust to little pokes by changing the passing angle and giving that backhanded saucer to the tape to a teammate who barely squeezed past a defender on the far side. Even the smallest passing windows come across as routine sometimes to him because of that control and sensing of pressure. He finished with a goal and an assist and it came across as a very regular outing for the smart, transition defender. There was one moment where he got caught out of position at his own blueline and was left to reach and hope to not get called for a penalty. Adjusting and owning those moments matter too.
Game Reports
EVALUATED
Chase Allen
Chase Allen
Game Information
2023 BAUER ELITE U15: LA JR. KINGS V ST. GEORGE’S
Seeing Brock Cripps a few times now, it always amazes me just how talented of a skater he is for being a 2009-born player. He seemingly has that next gear to his skating that allows him to take full advantage of his opponents who can’t play and process the game at his level, along with are physically unable to keep up with his speed and power. On multiple occasions in this game, he was able to get partial breaks and odd man rushes with great speed in transition, only needing a few steps to get going and fly by opponents as he crossed the offensive blueline. He picked up an assist on St. George’s’ first goal of the game as he split the defenders after making a strong cutback against the grain in the neutral zone towards the midline, saw a lane, darted forward, converged on the goalie and created a rebound chance for Holowaychuk to bury. The firmness, power, and release on his shot makes him an extremely dangerous shooting threat, again, for a 2009-born player, particularly as a defenseman, his shot is very well developed and likely supersedes along of his peers regarding its ability to create, along with finish scoring plays. When handling the puck his reads and decision making were very well refined, rarely throwing a puck away needlessly and always having the athletic ability to protect and persevere possession during scrambly moments of the game.