Arleigh Anderson
Player Overview
Height
5’4″
Position
Forward
Shot
Right
Team
Oakville Hornets U22AA
School
Thomas A. Stewart Secondary
Grad Class
2026
Programs of Interest
- Biology
- Kinesiology
- Pre-Med
Academic Record
Scouting Report
Defensive Zone
Key Strengths
- Early Scanning: Arleigh Anderson's head moves before the puck does. A look through the middle, a check behind, then back to the carrier — all before pressure arrives. That early information lets her set her feet instead of scrambling into late coverage, keeping her leverage tied to the inside when possession flips.
- Inside Awareness: Middle ice pulls her in. She stays stacked between puck and net, shoulders square, stick cutting off the direct line. When the puck slides wide, she resists drifting with it and keeps her body tied to the slot, forcing longer routes and delayed touches.
- Slot Discipline: Feet stay planted where plays break, not where they feel safe. She matches depth as the puck moves low, holds her line through the dots, and refuses to chase past dangerous ice. That patience limits second touches and keeps threats from forming inside her feet.
- Low Support: Puck goes below the hashmarks and she follows it down. She absorbs traffic, stays underneath coverage, and gives her defender a short, usable option instead of leaking high. Those routes shorten defensive sequences and calm breakdowns before they compound.
- Lane Control: Shooting cues pull her forward — shoulder load, blade open — and she steps into lanes with intent. Stick extends first, body follows, space disappears. The result is rushed releases and broken looks rather than clean shots from inside ice.
Areas to Refine
- Depth Control: There are sequences where she settles a step too deep while tracking low-to-high movement. That extra space forces reaction instead of confrontation and gives puck carriers room to extend plays into the slot.
- Engagement Timing: Reads arrive early, but closes don’t always land on the same beat. Jump early and space opens behind her; wait late and windows survive. The inconsistency shows up most against quick-touch movement.
- Shot Angles: She commits without hesitation, but arrives upright too often. Lanes narrow rather than fully close, allowing pucks to slip through traffic instead of dying on contact.
Key Strengths
- Direct Close: When she commits to pressure, Anderson closes on a straight line. No looping routes. No fly-bys. She drives through space with short, forceful strides, arriving on the puck carrier’s hands instead of drifting toward the body. That directness kills time and forces rushed decisions along the wall.
- Contact Willingness: She leans into contact without hesitation. Shoulder first, stick active, weight through the opponent’s core. Even when she doesn’t separate puck immediately, she absorbs space and denies clean turns, keeping the play pinned instead of extended.
- Stick Disruption: Her stick stays engaged on approach. Blade angled, hands out in front, searching for touch points rather than reaching late. She lifts, jabs, and clamps down through pressure, disrupting handles before the puck carrier can settle.
- Second Effort Pressure: Plays don’t end on the first attempt. If the puck slips past her initial close, she re-engages quickly, resetting her feet and driving back into the battle. That persistence turns broken pressures into prolonged containment instead of clean exits.
- Wall Containment: Along the boards, she angles pressure to trap opponents in narrow lanes. Body seals one side, stick removes the reverse, feet stay underneath contact. That containment forces chips instead of controlled plays and keeps pressure around the puck.
Areas to Refine
- Read Commitment: There are moments where she hesitates between holding position and fully engaging. That half-decision creates soft pressure and gives puck carriers time to spin or slip passes underneath.
- Approach Angle: On wider closes, her route can drift too square. That opens escape lanes back inside instead of sealing them toward the wall.
- Pressure Timing: She occasionally arrives a beat out of sync with support. Early pressure exposes space behind her; late pressure lets the puck move before contact arrives.
Key Strengths
- Lane Commitment: When shots begin to load, Anderson commits early. She steps into space without hesitation, squaring herself to the release rather than reaching late. That decisiveness removes clean sightlines and forces shooters to adjust before pucks leave the blade.
- Read Triggers: Her blocks are cue-driven, not reactive. Shoulder turn, puck pull, weight transfer — she recognizes the release pattern and moves before the shot fully loads. That anticipation turns dangerous looks into rushed attempts.
- Fearless Presence: Traffic doesn’t deter her. She holds ground through bodies, absorbs contact, and stays present in lanes even when screens tighten. That willingness shrinks shooting windows and disrupts timing in front.
- Stick Integration: Her stick works with her body, not behind it. Blade stays flat and extended, taking away the ice-level lane while her body handles the upper path. That coordination limits tips and redirects through congestion.
- Recovery Awareness: After contact, she stays engaged. Feet reset quickly, eyes stay on the puck, and she tracks rebounds instead of drifting out of the play. That awareness prevents second shots from forming uncontested.
Areas to Refine
- Body Angle: She arrives upright too often when stepping into lanes. That posture narrows space but doesn’t fully seal it, allowing pucks to slip through gaps rather than die on contact.
- Drop Timing: There are moments where her commitment is right but her drop arrives late. Shots get through low when timing doesn’t match the release.
- Lane Selection: At times, she commits to the first lane shown instead of the most dangerous one. That choice leaves secondary shooting options alive around the play.
Key Strengths
- First Touch Control: On retrievals, Anderson gets her body between puck and pressure early. She absorbs contact through her hips and shoulders, settles the puck on the first touch, and keeps it playable instead of scrambling. That control buys her time and keeps exits from turning into panic clears.
- Route Discipline: Her exit routes are deliberate. She angles retrievals to protect the puck, uses the wall when space collapses, and avoids cutting back into pressure. Those paths keep the puck moving north without pulling coverage out of place.
- Support Awareness: Before moving the puck, she checks her options. Head comes up, eyes scan short support first, then wide lanes. That awareness keeps exits connected and prevents defenders from being left isolated after the puck moves.
- Simple Decisions: She doesn’t force plays that aren’t there. When lanes are tight, she chips past pressure or rims with purpose; when space opens, she delivers short, firm passes that stay flat. That restraint keeps possession alive more often than not.
- Follow-Through Habits: After the puck leaves her stick, she doesn’t drift. She stays low, tracks the play out of the zone, and remains available underneath. That habit keeps exits from stalling and supports clean transition into the neutral zone.
Areas to Refine
- Exit Speed: There are moments where control turns into delay. Extra handling allows pressure to reload and closes lanes that were briefly open.
- Middle Touches: At times, she defaults to the wall even when the middle is momentarily available. That choice limits cleaner exits and keeps plays predictable.
- Pressure Recognition: When pressure arrives from the weak side, she can be late adjusting her route. That lag forces rushed releases instead of controlled exits.
Neutral Zone
Key Strengths
- Early Motion: Possession flips and Anderson is already moving. Feet activate before the puck clears the zone, head scanning middle ice and weak side as she accelerates into space. That early motion pulls defenders out of set gaps and gives her team a moving target instead of a static outlet.
- Route Intent: Her paths through the neutral zone are purposeful. No drifting. No coasting. She angles her routes to stay inside puck support while remaining reachable as an outlet, keeping herself connected to both the carrier and the next option. Those routes keep transition sequences alive even when spacing tightens.
- One-Touch Readiness: When the puck arrives, her blade is set and her head is already up. She advances play quickly — one touch when pressure closes, carry when lanes hold. That readiness keeps momentum moving forward instead of forcing resets.
- Connector Flexibility: She shifts roles fluidly between carrier and support. When space opens, she drives it; when it closes, she slides underneath and becomes the link. That adaptability lets play flow through her without stalling when coverage adjusts.
- Reset Instinct: When transition stalls, she doesn’t disappear. She circles low, re-enters the picture, and presents herself again as an option. That instinct prevents broken plays from turning into turnovers and re-establishes motion through the middle.
Areas to Refine
- Lane Directness: At times, her routes favor continuation over attack. Space is preserved, but penetration is delayed, allowing defenders to recover inside lanes.
- Carry Timing: There are moments where she defaults to moving the puck when a brief carry window exists. The puck advances, but pressure remains intact.
- Middle Drive: She supports through the middle consistently, but doesn’t always assert herself there with the puck. That restraint limits how often transition turns into immediate threat.
Key Strengths
- Early Drop Support: When possession turns back, Anderson drops immediately into the picture. She doesn’t float high or wait for the play to come to her — she sinks, shows target, and stays available underneath the puck. That early support keeps regroups from stalling and gives defenders a stable outlet.
- Target Presentation: She presents cleanly for passes. Hips open, shoulders angled, stick set early. Those details give the puck carrier a clear lane and reduce the need for extra handling before the pass is made.
- Feet-Through-Puck: She keeps her feet moving as the puck travels. Instead of stopping to receive, she times her route so the puck meets her in motion. That habit keeps regroups fluid and prevents pressure from collapsing on reception.
- Re-Support Habits: If the first option misses, she doesn’t fade out of the play. She curls, re-enters the lane, and presents again, staying connected until possession is secured. That persistence stabilizes broken regroups before they unravel.
- Middle Availability: She consistently positions herself inside dots during resets. That interior presence keeps passing options layered and prevents regroups from being forced exclusively to the wall.
Areas to Refine
- Voice Integration: She supports regroups through movement, but doesn’t always guide them verbally. Silence leaves some resets reactive instead of directed.
- Spacing Control: At times, she arrives too close to the puck carrier. That compresses passing lanes and limits deception through the middle.
- Tempo Variation: Her default is constant motion. Slowing slightly in select moments would allow lanes to open instead of pulling pressure forward.
Key Strengths
- Angle Entry: Anderson enters pressure on an inside-out path, aiming to remove the middle before the puck carrier reaches speed. Her route forces play toward the boards and narrows options early between the red lines.
- Gap Closing: She drives through space with urgency, keeping her feet under her and staying connected long enough to disrupt clean carries. That pressure shortens decision windows and prevents controlled buildup through the neutral zone.
- Stick Presence: On approach, her stick stays active and extended. Blade cuts passing lanes, hands stay in front, and she looks for touch points rather than swinging late. Rhythm breaks even without separation.
- Route Finish: When the puck moves laterally or chips past her first close, she stays in pursuit. Feet keep driving, route completes, pressure doesn’t die on contact. That follow-through limits clean regroups against her lane.
- Recovery Awareness: If pressure doesn’t force a turnover, she resets quickly. Head turns, feet recover underneath, and she slides back into the defensive picture to stay connected through the middle.
Areas to Refine
- Steering Angle: On some closes, her route stays too square. That allows puck carriers to retain inside access and carry through the neutral lane instead of being forced wide.
- Commit Threshold: There are moments where she hesitates between full pressure and containment. That half-decision gives carriers time to adjust and move the puck before pressure fully lands.
- Route Width: At times, her approach flattens wide. That angle opens a return path inside rather than sealing the play toward the boards.
Key Strengths
- Controlled Carries: When Anderson leads the rush, she carries with her head up and feet under control. She protects the puck through the middle lane when space holds, absorbing stick pressure without breaking stride. That control keeps entries alive instead of forcing early dumps.
- Delay Usage: She recognizes when the line isn’t there. Rather than forcing speed into coverage, she pulls up just inside the blue line, holds defenders, and buys time for support to arrive. Those delays prevent isolated entries and keep possession intact.
- Support Awareness: On entries without the puck, she stays connected underneath the play. Her routes mirror the carrier, staying inside passing lanes and available for short touch options. That awareness keeps the puck from dying wide or being chipped away under pressure.
- Lane Reading: She reads defender spacing early. When the middle seals, she shifts to the wall; when gaps widen, she drives through them. That adaptability keeps defenders guessing and prevents predictable entry patterns.
- Puck Protection: Through contact at the line, she leans into pressure with her body first. Hands stay free, puck stays outside her feet, and she absorbs hits without losing control. That strength allows her team to enter with possession rather than surrendering it.
Areas to Refine
- Attack Frequency: There are entries where she chooses continuation over confrontation. Possession is maintained, but defenders reset inside coverage.
- Middle Assertiveness: When space opens between defenders, she doesn’t always claim it herself. The puck advances, but direct threats off the rush are limited.
- Shot Creation: On clean carries, she prioritizes delay and distribution over releasing. That choice keeps play alive but reduces immediate scoring pressure off the entry.
Offensive Zone
Key Strengths
- Contact Control: With the puck, Anderson leans through her base and absorbs pressure instead of avoiding it. Hips stay square, feet stay underneath, and she protects possession through body position rather than extra touches. That strength turns contact into spacing and keeps plays alive along the wall and inside the dots.
- Touch Economy: Her puck touches follow sequence. Receive. Adjust. Move it. No extra pulls, no unnecessary stickhandling. That economy keeps defenders from loading pressure and allows play to advance before lanes close.
- Pressure Conversion: When pressure arrives, she doesn’t rush the puck away. She pulls defenders toward her, waits for coverage to shift, then releases to space that has already opened. That patience transforms pressure into advantage instead of forcing resets.
- Wall Retention: Along the boards, she stays balanced and difficult to separate from the puck. Stick stays tight to her feet, shoulders absorb contact, and she keeps the puck on the safe side of her body. Those habits extend cycles and prevent clean exits against her line.
- Possession Continuity: After moving the puck, she doesn’t disengage. She stays connected underneath the play, slides into the next available lane, and remains an option if possession stalls. That continuity keeps offensive sequences from breaking down after the first touch.
Areas to Refine
- Interior Turns: There are moments where she stays outside when a turn inside could change the angle of attack. Possession holds, but defenders reset their shape.
- Hold Length: At times, she releases the puck early even when she has space to carry another stride. The play continues, but pressure isn’t fully drawn out.
- Net-Line Assertion: She protects the puck well below the dots, but doesn’t always challenge defenders by driving it closer to the net. That limits how often possession converts into immediate threat.
Key Strengths
- Timing Arrival: Anderson doesn’t drift into space early. She waits, then arrives when pressure commits, sliding into seams as defenders turn their heads. That timing gives puck carriers a clean outlet instead of a covered option.
- Interior Support: Away from the puck, she stays inside routes whenever possible. She positions between checks, not outside them, keeping herself available for short touches that sustain possession through the middle of the zone.
- Cycle Awareness: During extended zone time, she reads where the puck is headed next rather than where it sits. She rotates low to high, then back underneath, keeping support layered and preventing cycles from stalling on the wall.
- Outlet Creation: When plays bog down, she becomes the release valve. She shows her stick early, settles into open ice, and gives her linemates a safe option to reset without throwing the puck away.
- Re-Engagement: After missed connections or broken plays, she re-enters the picture quickly. Feet move, lane opens, option reappears. That re-engagement keeps possession alive when sequences threaten to die.
Key Strengths
- Read Order: With the puck, Anderson works through options in sequence. First look inside, then low support, then the release to space. That order keeps plays connected and prevents rushed decisions when coverage tightens.
- Tape-to-Tape Accuracy: Her passes arrive flat and usable. She hits sticks in stride through traffic and along the wall, allowing receivers to continue motion instead of resetting their feet. That accuracy keeps offensive flow intact.
- Wall-to-Middle Links: From the boards, she pulls coverage toward her before moving the puck inside. Defenders step, lanes open, and the play shifts from low-risk space into threatening ice without forcing seams.
- Touch Discipline: She doesn’t over-handle before passing. One adjustment, then release. That discipline limits pressure buildup and keeps defenders from loading to her side of the play.
- Flow Management: When nothing is there, she doesn’t invent it. She cycles the puck back into motion, resets spacing, and stays connected until a new lane forms. That patience prevents broken possessions.
Areas to Refine
- Deception Use: Her intentions are readable. Eyes and shoulders often tell the truth early, allowing defenders to sit on lanes.
- Delay Variety: She releases quickly by default. Holding the puck an extra beat in select moments could force defenders to overcommit before the pass moves.
- Inside Manipulation: When plays funnel toward the slot, she tends to move the puck rather than draw coverage into herself. That limits how often passing lanes fully collapse inward.
Key Strengths
- Shot Selection: Anderson shoots from purpose, not impulse. Her attempts come off movement, rebounds, or broken coverage rather than static looks. That selectivity keeps her shots meaningful instead of feeding easy recoveries.
- Release Efficiency: When she does shoot, the puck comes off her blade quickly. Minimal load, compact motion, little telegraphing. That efficiency allows her to get shots off in traffic before defenders can close.
- Inside Positioning: Many of her scoring touches come from staying connected after the pass. She tracks rebounds, holds net-front space, and stays engaged around the crease rather than drifting out of the play. Those habits put her in scoring areas without needing designed looks.
- Second-Effort Finishes: Goals often follow her work, not the initial chance. Loose pucks, rebounds, broken sequences — she stays alive and ready, finishing plays she helped create earlier in the shift.
- Process-Driven Threat: She doesn’t hunt shots, but she stays involved long enough for them to find her. That process keeps defenders occupied and turns extended possessions into eventual chances.
Technical Skills
Key Strengths
- Stride Efficiency: Anderson skates with compact, repeatable mechanics. Stride stays underneath her hips, knees flexed, weight stacked through her base. That efficiency lets speed build gradually without wasted motion.
- Tempo Reading: She adjusts speed based on pressure and spacing rather than pushing every stride at full output. Glide and push alternate naturally, allowing her to arrive in control instead of overrunning plays.
- Edge Stability: On turns and transitions, she stays balanced through her edges. Feet stay quiet, shoulders remain level, and she holds her line through contact instead of drifting wide.
- Motion Continuity: She stays moving through plays. Even when not accelerating, her feet keep her connected — circling, curling, staying available. That constant motion keeps her from getting boxed in.
- Puck-Carry Sync: With the puck, her skating and hands stay linked. Stride length shortens under pressure, edges engage earlier, and control stays intact through traffic.
Areas to Refine
- First-Step Separation: She doesn’t gain instant distance off the first stride. Speed builds over space rather than exploding immediately.
- Stop-Start Burst: After full stops, re-acceleration can lag. Pressure can arrive before she fully regains momentum.
- Lateral Push: Side-to-side power is functional but not dominant. Defenders can mirror her when gaps stay tight.
Key Strengths
- Touch Discipline: Anderson keeps her handle tight and purposeful. Puck stays close to her feet, hands stay quiet, and every movement serves the next action rather than show. That discipline limits turnovers and keeps pressure from loading.
- Stride-Linked Handling: Her stick moves with her feet. Touches match stride length, allowing her to carry through traffic without breaking rhythm. That connection keeps control intact while she stays in motion.
- Body Shielding: She protects the puck with her frame first. Hips and shoulders absorb contact while her hands stay free, keeping the puck on the safe side of her body through pressure.
- Pressure Absorption: When defenders close, she doesn’t rush extra moves. She pulls the puck through contact, settles it, and exits pressure using balance rather than reach. That calm prevents forced plays.
- Transition Control: Off retrievals or loose pucks, she secures possession quickly. First touch settles the puck, second touch moves it into space. That sequence stabilizes play before pressure fully arrives.
Areas to Refine
- Static Handling: When forced to play from a standstill, her handle tightens. Options narrow until motion resumes.
- Deception Layer: Most touches are honest. Defenders can read intent early when eyes and hands move together.
- One-Hand Reach: She favors two-hand control even when extension could buy extra space. That limits how far she can manage pressure on the perimeter.
Key Strengths
- Early Identification: Before the puck settles, Anderson has already sorted her options. Head checks arrive early, shoulders turn, and the pass is chosen before pressure fully closes. That preparation keeps execution calm under forecheck.
- Flat Delivery: Her passes stay firm and flat. Pucks arrive on the tape, not in skates or behind the receiver, allowing teammates to stay in motion rather than resetting. That accuracy keeps sequences connected.
- Stride-Pass Timing: She delivers while moving. Passes come off her stride without breaking balance, which shortens windows for defenders to step into lanes. That timing helps her beat pressure without forcing pace.
- Short-Range Reliability: In tight areas, she favors simple, high-percentage connections. Wall plays, low-to-high feeds, and support passes land cleanly and keep possession alive through congestion.
- Pressure Composure: When forechecked, she stays on her edges and keeps her hands available. She doesn’t rush the puck away; she absorbs pressure, then releases once the lane opens. That composure prevents panic clears.
Areas to Refine
- Pass Disguise: Her eyes and shoulders often reveal the target early. Defenders can sit on lanes when reads are obvious.
- Range Variation: Most of her success comes in short to mid-range connections. Longer or cross-ice passes appear less frequently.
- Delay Use: She moves the puck quickly by default. Holding an extra beat in select moments could draw pressure deeper before release.
Key Strengths
- Compact Release: Anderson shoots with minimal load. Hands stay tight to her body, motion stays short, and the puck comes off her blade quickly. That compactness lets her release through traffic before lanes fully close.
- In-Stride Shooting: When space opens, she can shoot without stopping her feet. Weight transfers cleanly through her stride, keeping defenders from timing the release. That ability preserves momentum through attacking sequences.
- Placement Bias: Her shots are aimed, not fired. She looks for corners or a pop off the pad rather than overpowering goalies. That intent produces rebounds and second touches instead of dead pucks.
- Traffic Tolerance: She’s comfortable shooting into layers. Screens, sticks, and bodies don’t deter her release, and she keeps pucks low enough to get through congestion. That tolerance keeps shots from being blocked cleanly.
- Shot Selection: Attempts come from within flow. She shoots off movement, broken coverage, or rebounds rather than forcing looks from poor angles. That selectivity keeps possession from dying on low-percentage attempts.
Situational Play
Key Strengths
- Pattern Integrity: Anderson stays inside the system’s lanes instead of freelancing. She fills space as it opens, holds position when others drift, and keeps herself tethered to support on both sides of the puck. That integrity prevents small breakdowns from snowballing.
- Pressure Recognition: She reads when pressure is about to collapse and adjusts early. Routes shorten, puck moves, or coverage resets before seams open. Those anticipatory adjustments keep the group from reacting late.
- Formation Reset: When spacing slips, she pulls it back into order. A bump to relieve pressure, a retreat to anchor coverage, a clean handoff on the cycle — small touches that re-center the group without stopping play.
- Role Reliability: She executes her assignment without hunting extra involvement. Shifts stay within their lane, reads stay predictable to teammates, and support arrives where it’s expected. That reliability lets others play aggressively around her.
- Tempo Control: Within system constraints, she regulates speed. She slows play when shape matters and pushes when lanes are set. That control keeps systems intact under pace changes.
Areas to Refine
- Assertion Windows: There are moments where the system opens space for her to step into a larger role, but she stays conservative. Shape holds, but advantage doesn’t fully materialize.
- Early Command: She adjusts well once patterns shift, but doesn’t always initiate those corrections herself. The system stabilizes, but often after the first wobble.
- Broken-Play Opportunities: In broken sequences, she defaults back into structure quickly. That choice restores order, but can bypass brief opportunities to exploit disorder.
Key Strengths
- Low-Play Vision: From below the goal line and along the half wall, Anderson scans before the puck arrives. She checks middle ice, the weak side, then the penalty killer closest to her. That early information lets her move the puck before pressure closes, keeping seams available instead of reacting late.
- Touch Tempo: Her puck movement is quick and measured. One-touch passes, short pulls, immediate releases. That tempo keeps the penalty kill shifting laterally instead of loading pressure toward the puck.
- Interior Feeds: From low positions, she delivers pucks into dangerous ice. Passes arrive flat through seams or off pads rather than being forced through sticks. Those feeds create second chances without requiring perfect looks.
- Support Layering: Away from the puck, she stays connected underneath the play. She rotates into soft ice, stays available as a reset option, and keeps possession alive when first looks disappear.
- Rebound Intent: When she does shoot, it’s purposeful. Pucks are placed to pads or through traffic, creating loose pucks rather than dead stops. That intent supports extended possession instead of single-shot outcomes.
Areas to Refine
- Lane Claim: There are moments where shooting or driving lanes open, but she defers to the next pass. Possession continues, but pressure isn’t fully turned into threat.
- Net-Front Presence: She works effectively below the goal line, but doesn’t always rotate into the crease after moving the puck. That limits immediate rebound pressure.
- Shot Readiness: On clean puck movement, her release isn’t always loaded early. Windows appear, but the shot option isn’t immediately available.
Key Strengths
- Lane Prioritization: Anderson consistently protects the most dangerous ice first. She sets her body between puck and middle, stick angled to take away seams rather than chasing the carrier. That prioritization forces plays outward and delays the puck from reaching shooting lanes cleanly.
- Controlled Pressure: When pressure is hers to apply, she closes with restraint. Feet stay under control, routes stay inside-out, and she avoids overcommitting past the puck. That discipline prevents slip passes and keeps the penalty kill connected behind her.
- Stick Discipline: Her stick does constant work on the kill. Blade stays in lanes, hands stay active, and she disrupts puck movement without swinging or lunging. Even when she doesn’t win the puck, she interferes with timing enough to force resets.
- Rotation Awareness: As the puck moves, she adjusts with it. Shoulders stay square to the middle, feet pivot early, and she tracks threats off the puck instead of puck-watching. That awareness keeps her aligned with her partner and prevents coverage gaps from opening behind rotations.
- Clear Execution: When possession turns, she wastes no time. Clears are direct and purposeful — glass when needed, controlled when space allows. She doesn’t overhandle under pressure, which keeps the kill from extending unnecessarily.
Areas to Refine
- Block Commitment: There are sequences where she fronts lanes from distance rather than fully committing to the block. The lane narrows, but shots still arrive through traffic instead of being eliminated entirely.
- Pressure Finish: At times, she contains shooters instead of fully closing the final step. Space shrinks, but releases still get off before contact arrives.
- Inside Holds: When plays settle low, she can drift a half-step outside the dots while tracking the puck. Coverage stays intact, but interior threats remain alive longer than necessary.
Key Strengths
- Game Management: Anderson consistently makes plays that fit the moment. Late in shifts or in tight score situations, pucks move safely; when time and space exist, possession extends. You see it in when she chips versus carries, holds versus moves, presses versus settles. Those choices keep her line out of trouble and aligned with game state.
- Shift Management: Her shifts have clear boundaries. When energy dips, she shortens routes, places pucks intelligently, and gets off without forcing one more touch. That awareness prevents tired mistakes and protects momentum through clean changes.
- Risk Calibration: She adjusts her decisions based on situation rather than defaulting to one mode. Early-game plays stay open; late-game plays tighten. The difference shows up in where she attempts passes and how much ice she tries to gain. Risk stays proportional, not habitual.
- Matchup Adjustment: Her approach shifts depending on who she’s facing. Against tired or slower defenders, she extends possession and forces them to defend longer. Against fresh pairs, she simplifies and protects the puck. Those adjustments are visible in route choice and puck placement, not guesswork.
- Emotional Regulation: Her play remains steady regardless of swings. After missed chances or long defensive shifts, her next touch stays composed. Body language doesn’t spike, routes don’t wander, and execution stays level. That consistency stabilizes her line during volatile stretches.
Areas to Refine
- Tempo Assertion: She reads momentum well but doesn’t always impose herself to change it. There are moments where she manages the game when a firmer grab could tilt it.
- Advantage Assertion: In favorable moments — space off the rush or defenders on their heels — she often keeps the puck moving rather than attacking the opening herself. Possession continues, but pressure resets instead of being stressed.
- Command Presence: Her awareness shows more through action than direction. Communication is present, but often reactive rather than leading.
Mental Game
Key Strengths
- Play Anticipation: Anderson is usually arriving before the play fully forms. She reads pressure early, tracks where the puck is likely to go, and moves into space ahead of the action instead of reacting once it’s already there. That shows up in how rarely she’s late or chasing.
- Support Mapping: Away from the puck, she adjusts her positioning based on what support is available. She closes routes when options are thin and stretches when outlets exist, keeping spacing usable rather than frozen. Those adjustments help possessions survive pressure.
- Read Patience: She holds her ground until the play declares itself. Instead of jumping on the first look, she waits for a clear cue — a defender stepping, a lane opening — and then commits. That patience keeps her from leaving useful ice too early.
- Sequence Recognition: She plays with awareness of how actions connect. One touch sets up the next, one movement opens the following lane. Her decisions reflect what just happened and what’s about to happen, not isolated moments.
- System Awareness: Her reads stay aligned with team concepts. She knows when to stay in her lane and when to rotate through it, keeping her decisions predictable to teammates without becoming mechanical.
Areas to Refine
- Read Speed: Her reads are correct, but there are moments where the response arrives a beat late. The idea is there, but the window closes before the action fully shows.
- First-Thought Trust: She sometimes double-checks reads longer than needed. The play stays safe, but opportunities to act decisively pass.
- Manipulation Layer: She reads defenders well but doesn’t always use that information to pull them out of position. The puck moves, but coverage isn’t consistently distorted by her choices.
Key Strengths
- Shift-to-Shift Motor: Anderson’s effort doesn’t spike or dip. From first shift to last, her feet keep moving, routes stay complete, and pressure doesn’t fade late in sequences. That consistency makes her presence predictable in the best way — coaches know what they’re getting every time she’s over the boards.
- Battle Persistence: Initial contact doesn’t end her involvement. If the puck pops loose or pressure slips past her first attempt, she re-engages immediately. Stick stays active, feet reset, and she stays in the fight until possession is resolved rather than drifting out once the first effort fails.
- Backcheck Commitment: When play turns, she tracks all the way back through the middle. Stride length stays aggressive, routes stay direct, and she closes from inside-out instead of coasting behind the play. Those recoveries erase rushes that look dangerous two seconds earlier.
- Detail Effort: Her compete shows up in small actions. Stick lifts in tight, shoulder checks before contact, second touches to free pucks along the wall. She doesn’t cheat those moments, even when they don’t lead to immediate possession.
- Standard Setting: Her work rate doesn’t ask for attention, but it sets tone. Teammates mirror her pace in contested sequences because she doesn’t disengage when plays get messy. The standard is visible in how shifts stay connected around her.
Areas to Refine
- Early Assertion: There are shifts where her effort builds as play develops rather than asserting immediately. Compete arrives, but not always at the opening contact point.
- Contact Finish: She engages consistently but doesn’t always finish battles with separation. Pressure disrupts, but pucks don’t always come free.
- Offensive Push: Her compete shows most clearly in defensive and neutral sequences. In the offensive zone, that same urgency doesn’t always translate into direct attacks on the inside.
Key Strengths
- Response Stability: After goals against, missed chances, or broken plays, Anderson’s next shift looks the same as her last good one. Routes stay honest, feet stay engaged, and decisions don’t speed up or shrink. That consistency keeps single moments from snowballing.
- Body Language Control: Her posture never gives away frustration. Head stays up, shoulders stay square, and engagement doesn’t drop after contact or missed execution. Teammates don’t have to manage her emotion — they can just play beside it.
- Pressure Tolerance: Tight moments don’t rush her. Late shifts, long defensive sequences, and hostile momentum don’t force hurried touches or panic clears. She absorbs the moment and plays through it rather than trying to escape it.
- Next-Play Focus: When sequences turn messy, she immediately re-enters the play. Feet move, angle resets, stick stays involved. Attention stays on what’s available now, not what just happened.
- Bench Calm: Between shifts, her demeanor stays even. No visible swings, no outward reaction. That calm carries onto the ice and helps steady lines during volatile stretches.
Areas to Refine
- Emotional Assertion: Her composure is steady, but it doesn’t always translate into visible leadership in heated moments. She settles situations through play more than presence.
- Momentum Grab: There are opportunities after big stops or momentum swings where she keeps things level instead of leaning into the moment. Control holds, but advantage isn’t always pressed.
- Communication Urgency: She communicates consistently, but tone stays even even when urgency could sharpen group response. Information gets through, but not always with force.
Key Strengths
- Quick Reset: When a play breaks down, Anderson re-engages immediately. Feet move, route tightens, stick returns to the lane. She’s back in the next sequence instead of carrying the previous one with her.
- Mistake Isolation: Errors stay contained. A missed play doesn’t bleed into the next touch or the next shift. Her routes, decisions, and effort return to baseline without visible frustration or hesitation.
- Shift Consistency: Tough shifts don’t change her next one. She doesn’t chase redemption or pull back into caution. The reset shows in how steady her game remains regardless of what just happened.
- Physical Cues: Her reset happens through action. A hard stride, a clean angle, a simple touch. You can see it in her movement before anything else changes.
- Bench Carryover: What happens on the ice doesn’t linger on the bench. Her demeanor stays level between shifts, allowing each deployment to start clean.
Areas to Refine
- Positive Push: She resets negatives well, but doesn’t always build extra momentum off successful sequences. The game stabilizes, but advantage isn’t always extended.
- Reset Aggression: The reset restores order first. At times, it settles back to neutral instead of turning immediately into assertive impact.
- Voice Reset: Her reset is clear through movement, less so through communication. Teammates follow her actions more than her voice.
Game Film & Highlights
| Date | Opponent | Game Type | Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 13, 2026 | Ottawa 67s | Season | ▶ Watch Film |
| Feb 8, 2026 | North York Storm | Season | ▶ Watch Film |
| Dec 5, 2025 | Chicago Mission | Showcase | ▶ Watch Film |
| Dec 5, 2025 | Okanagan Red | Showcase | ▶ Watch Film |
| Oct 19, 2025 | Burlington Barracudas | Season | ▶ Watch Film |
| Sept 2025 | Various | Highlights | ▶ Watch Film |
| Sept 13, 2025 | Anaheim Lady Ducks | Showcase | ▶ Watch Film |
| Sept 13, 2025 | Bishop Kearney Selects | Showcase | ▶ Watch Film |
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Arleigh Anderson would like to pursue a career as a forensic scientist or chiropractor after hockey. She plans to study forensics or kinesiology to support the academic path toward those careers.
- Arleigh Anderson plays rugby for school and club teams, enjoys travelling with her family, and spends time baking and being with friends — a balanced mix of competition, creativity, and downtime.
- Arleigh Anderson works with Autumn Mills for strength and conditioning, plays under Jay Summers and Jess Turi, and trains in the summer at ProStride Skating Lab in Toronto with her skating coach, Jake McCaig.
- Arleigh Anderson prioritizes developing her character and leadership skills through her school’s Outdoor Leadership program and Grade 12 Recreation & Leadership class.