Lauren Kruzel
Player Overview
Height
5’10”
Position
Forward
Shot
Right
Team
Oakville Hornets U22AA
School
St.Martin Catholic Secondary School
Grad Class
2027
Programs of Interest
- Bioengineering
- Biomedical Sciences
- Environmental Sciences
Academic Record
Scouting Report
Defensive Zone
Key Strengths
- Strong-Side Authority: Lauren Kruzel steps into pressure on the wall with conviction — she pins her assignment, absorbs contact, and holds the position long enough to free the puck rather than just contest it. There's no drifting or guessing once she's committed.
- Weak-Side Anchor: Her 5'11" frame makes her a natural lane eraser on the weak side without requiring constant repositioning. Opponents are forced to skate around her space rather than through it, eliminating backdoor threats before they form.
- Traffic Awareness: When pucks disappear into congested areas, Lauren doesn't get swallowed by the pile. She reads the edge of traffic and stays mobile enough to scoop loose pucks rather than getting buried in the scramble.
- Structural Fit: Her reads translate cleanly between the demands of strong-side pressure and weak-side coverage. She doesn't need to reset her mental picture when the puck moves — her positioning adjusts to the new look without losing the structure behind it.
- Assignment Clarity: Lauren knows who she's responsible for and commits to that matchup. She doesn't get pulled off her mark chasing the puck, which keeps the defensive zone organized even when her linemates are under pressure.
Areas to Refine
- Strong-to-Weak Transition: After winning a strong-side battle, Lauren can be a beat slow physically moving across to her weak-side position. Getting her feet moving to the weak side the moment the puck is freed — rather than pausing to confirm the play — would close off shots that currently get through before she's fully reset.
- Anticipate the Entry: Against stretch lineups, Lauren tends to wait for the puck to cross the line before committing to her weak-side spot. Reading the formation as it develops and moving into position before the entry lands would let her frame eliminate the backdoor threat before it becomes one.
- Pressure Anticipation: When her reads are right, her positioning is nearly airtight. Moving into position before pressure lands — rather than responding once it's already applied — turns her from a reliable defensive presence into a predictive one that opponents have to solve before they even touch the puck.
Key Strengths
- Explosive First Steps: Lauren's first three strides generate a closing speed most players her size can't match. She collapses the available time for the puck carrier before they've had a chance to settle into their next move.
- Forced Errors: The pace she brings off the line isn't just about speed — it forces puck carriers into rushed touches, bad angles, and decisions made under duress. Direct turnovers off her pressure aren't accidents; they're the product of a threat that arrives too fast to manage cleanly.
- Size as a Pressure Tool: She doesn't just close space — her physical frame fills it. Even when she doesn't get all the way to the puck, her presence shrinks the passing window and takes away the easy look out of the corner.
- Finishes Her Check: Lauren doesn't pull out of her pursuit when the puck carrier braces for contact. She brings the full collision, which makes her pressure credible and forces carriers to brace rather than focus on their next play.
- Recovery Instinct: When her first pressure push doesn't result in a direct takeaway, she doesn't get stranded. She reads the bounce and repositions efficiently enough to stay a factor rather than leaving her team short behind her.
Areas to Refine
- Closing Angle: Lauren drives straight at the carrier in a number of her pressure reps. Coming from a slightly more disruptive angle — cutting off the escape route before contact — would turn races she's already winning into cleaner turnovers without asking more of her athleticism.
- Route Selection: The gap between arriving fast and arriving at the right spot is where the next level of her pressure game lives. Identifying the carrier's weak shoulder and committing to that path before the final stride would increase her rate of clean turnovers significantly.
- Puck Pursuit: When the puck moves off her first check to the next man, Lauren tends to briefly reset rather than immediately redirecting her pursuit. Staying in hunt mode through the full possession — chasing the puck to its next location rather than regrouping — keeps sustained heat on the forecheck and forces breakdowns that a single press never produces on its own.
Key Strengths
- Shot Disruption: Lauren reads the release point early and gets her stick into the shooting lane before the puck leaves the blade. She's breaking up plays at the source rather than reacting after the shot is already in the air.
- Disciplined Drop Form: When she does get down into a block, the form is tight and purposeful. She's not flailing into the shot — she's positioning her body to maximize the amount of lane she covers relative to where the puck is actually going.
- Frame Utilization: Her size gives her the ability to erase large portions of the shooting lane, and when she commits to a block, that frame produces results — covering passes, deflections, and redirects that would get through against a smaller forward. The tool is real; the opportunity is in how often she deploys it.
- Timing as a Skill: The decision to go down isn't late and desperate — it's timed to the shooter's motion. That timing turns what could be a reactive dive into a controlled block that leaves her in a recoverable position after contact.
- Stick Before Body: Lauren uses her stick to pressure the lane before committing her body to a full block. That sequencing disrupts the shooting lane earlier in the play and gives her more time to read whether a full drop is actually necessary.
Areas to Refine
- Blocking Forwards: Lauren has the size to take away significant net from forwards shooting inside or wide, but she doesn't commit to those blocks consistently enough. Making that a more automatic response to inside shooting situations gives her a defensive dimension that very few forwards at her level bring.
- Blocking Defensemen: Against point shots, Lauren tends to hold her position rather than challenging the lane. Getting her body into the passing and shooting lanes before the defenseman settles into their release would disrupt more point shots and turn her into a genuine problem for opposing power plays.
- Recovery After Block: Once she's blocked a shot, her return to a skating position is occasionally deliberate enough that a rebound or second shot gets taken before she's back in the play. Tightening that floor recovery keeps her effective through the full sequence rather than just the first attempt.
Key Strengths
- Immediate Separation: When Lauren wins a puck battle, she doesn't pause to organize — one push off the wall and she's already creating daylight. The speed of that transition puts the forecheck immediately behind her and flips the momentum before the opponent has time to regroup.
- Carry Threat: Because she separates so quickly off the first stride, Lauren arrives at the puck with enough speed to make carrying it out a genuine option. Forecheckers have to respect that threat, which creates hesitation and buys time even on possessions that ultimately end in a pass.
- High-Percentage Decision Making: Lauren reads the difference between a puck she can skate with and one that needs to move quickly. She doesn't force exits — her giveaway rate stays low because she holds the puck when that's the right answer and releases it cleanly when it isn't.
- First-Option Execution: On structured breakouts, she finds her first option quickly and delivers it with confidence. The play doesn't stall or get recycled — she moves it and gets her feet going, which keeps the exit chain moving at pace.
- Finding Stretch: When a linemate is already moving into open ice, Lauren spots it and puts the puck on them accurately. Those feeds turn defensive-zone wins into controlled offensive transitions rather than neutral-zone scrambles.
Areas to Refine
- Low Support: In messy situations, Lauren occasionally drifts a touch high rather than dropping down to offer a shorter, safer outlet option. Maintaining depth through scramble moments gives her defensemen a reliable target and reduces the number of exits that stall or turn over.
- Second Looks: When forecheckers take away her first look and the play gets compressed, her decision-making slows. Finding her second read faster under pressure — particularly in tight-wall situations — would shorten the time spent in-zone on contested possessions and turn stalled exits into clean ones.
- Breakout Role Versatility: Lauren is most confident executing as the carrier or the first receiver. Expanding her comfort in wider support roles — sealing a lane, holding a board position while the puck moves elsewhere, then rejoining the exit — would make her a more complete breakout participant in systems that cycle through multiple reads.
Neutral Zone
Key Strengths
- Puck-Carrying Threat: Lauren's carries through the neutral zone tilt the play in her team's favour almost immediately. She builds separation with her first few strides and generates enough power through the middle that defenders are forced to back off rather than challenge her directly.
- Puck Protection in Stride: She doesn't slow down through contact — she absorbs it and keeps moving. That ability to protect the puck while maintaining speed makes her a reliable option to move the puck through the middle even when the lane isn't clean.
- Space Creation: Her carries don't just move the puck — they open the ice around her. Defenders collapsing on Lauren widen the exit lanes for her linemates, giving her team cleaner support positions and more controlled movement up ice.
- F2 Read: Off the puck, Lauren reads her role accurately — she knows when to jump as F2 and attack the entry aggressively and when to hold as the trailing option. That dual-threat positioning forces defenders to account for multiple layers at once.
- Decisive at the Line: Lauren doesn't carry indecision into the neutral zone — when she has the puck and a lane, she's already moving before the defender has finished setting their gap. That decisiveness keeps the puck moving north and forces defenders to react to her rather than the other way around.
Areas to Refine
- Receive in Stride: Lauren currently tends to settle into her regroup spot and wait for the puck before attacking. Timing her movement so the puck meets her already in motion would make her carries significantly harder to contain and give defenders almost no time to set their gap.
- Attack the Off-Wing: When Lauren enters through the middle, cutting to her off-wing side would load her blade for an immediate shot and force the defence to collapse in a way that creates seams for her linemates. That one adjustment turns a strong neutral-zone carry into a direct scoring threat the moment she crosses the line.
- Commit Earlier: Her F2 reads are strong but not yet automatic. Committing to her positioning decisions before the regroup is fully set — rather than waiting to confirm the play — would put her in the right spot sooner and remove the hesitation defenders are currently exploiting at the line.
Key Strengths
- Hits Her Spots: Lauren arrives at her regroup position on time and doesn't freelance outside the structure. Her defencemen know exactly where she's going to be, which keeps the puck moving rather than stalling while players find each other.
- In-Sync Timing: Her timing within the regroup matches the rhythm of the play around her. She doesn't arrive early and kill momentum or show up late and force her defenceman to hold the puck — she's where she needs to be, when she needs to be there.
- Short Support: When the regroup breaks down and the puck has to go back, Lauren doesn't abandon the play — she stays available, gives her defenceman a short outlet, and keeps the possession alive rather than letting it die at the line.
- Collects Clean: She receives the puck out of the regroup without bobbling it under pressure. At the red line, where a fumbled touch kills all the momentum her defenceman just created, that reliability is what keeps the play moving in the right direction.
- Reads the Structure: Lauren doesn't need a regroup called out to her — she watches the puck, reads where her defenceman is going, and arrives at the right spot before the play demands it. That instinct removes communication breakdowns from the equation entirely.
Areas to Refine
- Explode Off the Regroup: Lauren uses her regroup position to reset and receive cleanly, but hasn't yet turned it into a launching point. Coming lower and quieter into her spot before attacking back up ice — so the puck finds her already accelerating — would make her carry threat significantly harder for defenders to time and close on.
- Regroup to Entry: Lauren receives cleanly out of the regroup but pauses before committing to her entry route. That half-second between collecting the puck and attacking is where defenders recover — eliminating it by choosing her lane before the puck arrives would turn a clean regroup into immediate zone pressure.
- Adapt Off Structure: When her defence is forced to improvise and the regroup loses its shape, Lauren can be slow to find a new outlet position. The puck is moving, the structure isn't there, and she waits a beat too long for it to reappear rather than adjusting her spot to meet the play where it actually is.
Key Strengths
- Carries the Forecheck: The pressure Lauren applies in her own end doesn't stop at the red line. She closes hard through the neutral zone and puts the same heat on regrouping defenders that she brings in the corners — the forecheck doesn't have an off switch when she's on the ice.
- Active Stick: Her stick is a constant disruption in the neutral zone. She forces defenders into horizontal touches, rushed decisions, and passes they don't want to make — not by gambling, but by keeping her stick active in passing lanes while staying on her feet.
- First-Step Closing: She gets to defenders quickly enough that they can't settle into comfortable regroup positions. The same first-step explosiveness she generates in her own end translates directly into neutral-zone turnovers and broken-up regroups.
- Disciplined Forecheck: Lauren applies pressure without taking herself out of the play. She doesn't lunge or reach — she closes the angle, keeps her feet moving, and stays in position to recover if the puck moves before she gets there.
- Forces East-to-West: When Lauren closes, defenders don't have time to turn up ice cleanly — they go sideways. The puck moves laterally, the play slows down, and her team reads the change of direction before the opposing forwards do.
Areas to Refine
- Backcheck Route: When Lauren gets beat in the neutral zone, she tends to stop and restart rather than swinging into the backcheck with her speed already built. Staying in motion and curving back into the play would keep her pressure alive longer and turn more broken plays into immediate transition the other way.
- Timing the Close: There are moments where Lauren's close arrives a beat late — the defender has already made the touch by the time she gets there. Reading the defenceman's first look rather than waiting for the first touch would put her on pucks she's currently just missing and create turnovers she's not yet generating.
- Angle, Don't Chase: Lauren's size makes her a natural angling threat in the neutral zone, but she closes straight at defenders more than she needs to. Angling them toward the boards rather than driving straight at them would let her frame do more of the work and create more forced errors without burning the same burst every time.
Key Strengths
- Creates Her Own Entry: Lauren doesn't need a play set up for her — she can manufacture her own entry off her skating and reads alone. That self-sufficiency makes her a threat even when the structure around her breaks down.
- Changes Lanes in Stride: She can shift her entry lane without losing speed or tipping the move early. Defenders who think they have her angle locked up find themselves out of position before the puck crosses the line.
- Seam Recognition: Lauren identifies the moment a defender opens a seam and attacks it immediately — with either a pass or her own skates. That timing is the difference between an entry that generates zone time and one that gets picked off at the line.
- Give-and-Go Timing: She feeds the puck to the line, reads the return lane before the pass even arrives, and is already moving into the space when the puck comes back. The sequence happens without a pause — the give and the go are one motion, not two.
- Enters with a Plan: Lauren doesn't just cross the line — she enters with purpose. Whether she's cutting inside, attacking wide, or feeding a teammate into a seam, the entry bends the coverage into something her team can build off rather than simply gaining the zone.
Areas to Refine
- Entry to Pressure: Lauren's entries are effective but once she crosses the line her first few strides inside the zone aren't always on the most direct path to the puck or the defender. Tightening that initial route — particularly on wide entries — would keep defenders moving backwards through the full sequence rather than recovering the moment she decelerates.
- Beat the Body: Most of Lauren's best entries happen when she has a step on the defender. Developing her ability to execute the same moves when the defender is already on her hip — using her size and lower body to protect the puck through contact — would make her entry threat consistent regardless of how much room she's given at the line.
- Wide Entry Pace: When Lauren attacks wide, she carries through the blue line at full speed and arrives at the wall before her linemates have had time to fill the lanes behind her. Changing speeds at the line — a deliberate hold as she crosses — would let her teammates catch up and give her options to work with instead of an empty zone at her back.
Offensive Zone
Key Strengths
- Protection Mechanics: Lauren drops her shoulder, sets her hands, and holds the puck just outside the reach of the checker — creating separation through body positioning alone rather than requiring extra ice to do it.
- Speed Changes: She has the gear shift to pull checkers out of position and slip into open ice — a sudden change of pace that makes her route unpredictable even when the ice is crowded.
- Settles Pressure: Lauren doesn't panic when the puck arrives in tight — she absorbs the contact, gets her body between the checker and the puck, and organises the play from there. That composure turns scrambled possessions into controlled ones.
- Low Giveaway Rate: Because she doesn't force plays under pressure, she holds the puck until the right option appears. Her patience in those moments keeps possession in her team's hands without burning the puck on a low-percentage decision.
- Draws the Collapse: Lauren holds the puck long enough that defenders are pulled toward her — and when they come, lanes open for her linemates before she's even decided where the puck is going. That ability to draw pressure and redistribute it is what makes her dangerous even when she isn't moving.
Areas to Refine
- Attack Out of Possession: Lauren's protection mechanics are strong enough that she can use that protected position as a launching point to attack rather than waiting for the pressure to ease before moving. Turning those possession moments into immediate offensive threats would add another layer to an already difficult skill set to defend.
- Speed Change Consistency: She has the gear shift but doesn't deploy it consistently enough to make it a reliable weapon. Using that change of pace more deliberately — particularly when she's already drawn a checker tight — would create more separation and open more ice than she's currently generating.
- Puck Retrieval Battles: Lauren's possession game is strongest when the puck is already on her stick. Competing harder for pucks along the wall and in the corners — so she gets into her possession mechanics more often — would extend her impact across a fuller shift.
Key Strengths
- Finds Soft Space: When the puck moves low, Lauren slides into the nearest soft space without being asked. She doesn't stand and watch the cycle — she stays connected to it, which keeps her available as an outlet and keeps the defensive structure honest.
- Opens the Ice: When her centre cuts inside, Lauren widens automatically to balance the ice. That movement creates a two-option look that forces the defence to choose — and either choice opens something for her team.
- Cycle Timing: Her routes off the cycle are timed to arrive in open space rather than into coverage. She doesn't chase the puck around the perimeter — she anticipates where it's going and positions herself to receive it clean.
- Rush Reads: When the rush forms, Lauren reads the situation accurately — she knows when to stretch the defensive line, when to delay and let the play develop, and when to cut underneath and become a slot option. Those reads keep multiple layers alive simultaneously.
- Weak-Side Availability: She stays connected to the play on the weak side rather than drifting out of the picture when the puck goes away from her. That availability gives her linemates a release valve and keeps the defensive structure from collapsing entirely onto the strong side.
Areas to Refine
- Attack the Inside: Lauren's off-puck routes tend to favour the perimeter. Getting to the interior more consistently — particularly to the slot and the back door — would put her in higher-danger positions and force defenders to account for her inside rather than letting her circle the outside.
- Net-Front Reads: When the puck goes below the goal line, Lauren doesn't consistently get to the net-front position. Establishing that presence more reliably would give her linemates a high-percentage target and create deflection and rebound opportunities that her current positioning leaves open.
- Timing Off the Rush: Her rush reads are accurate but her timing on the cut underneath is occasionally a beat early — she arrives in the slot before the play is ready to find her there. Holding that cut one moment longer would put her in the right spot at the right time and increase the number of clean looks she gets from the interior.
Key Strengths
- Hits the Seam: Lauren can find seams at distance with confidence — the pass arrives on tape, on time, and at a pace the receiver can handle. That range makes her a threat to move the puck quickly through the offensive zone rather than relying entirely on the cycle.
- Delivers Off Movement: Her most dangerous passes come when she's already in motion — body angled, edges loaded, puck moving — which gives her the time and lane to find teammates in tight without needing to stop and set. She doesn't need a clean look to deliver a clean pass.
- Creates with Deception: In close quarters, Lauren uses subtle misdirection to open passing windows that shouldn't exist — a shoulder dip, a body shift, or a half-blade puck move that freezes the defender long enough for the lane to crack open. The deception happens at the point of delivery.
- Around-the-Net Feeds: Her passing around the net is among the sharpest elements of her game. Slip passes between skates, touch feeds through sticks, and blind-side slot deliveries arrive clean — these aren't desperate plays, they're calculated reads built off her ability to hold defenders in place.
- Coverage Manipulation: Before the pass is even a consideration, Lauren is already moving defenders with her edges, her body angle, and deliberate puck holds. She doesn't react to coverage — she reshapes it, and by the time she's ready to move the puck her linemates are already in open ice.
Areas to Refine
- Shoot Off the Pass: There are situations where Lauren has already drawn coverage and a clean lane to the net has opened — and she passes anyway. Recognising those moments and shooting rather than continuing to distribute would make her a genuinely unpredictable threat because defenders could no longer sit back and wait for the pass.
- Speed of Release: Her passes in tight spaces are accurate but occasionally take one extra touch to deliver. Getting the puck off faster — particularly on slot deliveries and blind-side feeds — would reduce the number of windows that close before the pass arrives.
- Weak-Side Seam: Lauren's passing reads favour the strong side and the cycle. Finding the weak-side seam more consistently — particularly when the defensive structure has shifted to load the strong side — would add a dimension to her playmaking that defenders at this level aren't yet prepared to take away.
Key Strengths
- Quick Release: Lauren's release triggers before defenders have finished closing — she doesn't need a clean setup or a full wind-up to get the puck on net with authority. In open ice with a step on the defender, that speed of release is what separates a shot on goal from a blocked attempt.
- Attacks to Score: She carries onto the rush with a finisher's mentality — her eyes go to the net first, she picks her lane early, and she doesn't look for a linemate until the shooting option is genuinely gone. That intent forces defenders to close her rather than sitting back and reading the play.
- Finds the Corner: When the puck settles on her blade and she has a look, she shoots with purpose — picking a corner rather than just putting the puck on net. That precision turns good scoring positions into goals rather than saves.
- Catch-and-Fire: In tight — off a cycle feed, a seam pass, or a give-and-go return — she receives and releases in one motion, beating goalies who are still tracking the puck to its source rather than the shooter. The shot is already gone before the save attempt has had a chance to form.
- Isolation Pattern: Lauren has developed a signature route — wide on the entry, cut back behind the defenceman, isolate the goalie. The pattern generates clean one-on-one looks on a consistent basis and her shot is converting them.
Areas to Refine
- Trust the Route: Lauren's isolation pattern works — but she doesn't commit to it with full conviction every time. Trusting that route completely, even when the defenceman is close, would increase the number of clean looks she creates and reduce the occasions where she abandons a sequence that was already working.
- Net-Front Finishing: Lauren is already showing signs of becoming a threat at the net front — she's getting there more often and her hands are capable of converting in close. Making that a deliberate part of her offensive game rather than an occasional read would add a finishing dimension that doesn't depend on creating separation first.
- Read the Shot: There are moments where Lauren releases from low-percentage positions when a pass or a hold would produce a cleaner look. Sharpening the read of when the shot is the right play — and when one more touch creates a better chance — would increase her conversion rate without asking more of her release.
Technical Skills
Key Strengths
- Stride Power: Lauren generates significant force out of each push — she covers ground quickly and builds top-end speed with only a few strides. That power base gives her the ability to separate from defenders without needing a running start.
- Long-Stride Efficiency: Lauren's frame gives her a natural advantage in open ice — her stride is long enough that she closes ground and reaches pucks with fewer pushes than a shorter skater needs to cover the same distance. She gets there without burning extra energy to do it.
- Controlled Acceleration: She doesn't just go fast — she manages her speed deliberately. The ability to change gears while carrying the puck, rather than dumping it to create space, makes her a threat in transition and in tight areas simultaneously.
- Puck Management in Stride: Lauren keeps the puck under control at speed without having to slow down to reorganise it. The coordination between her skating and her hands at full pace holds up even when defenders are closing and the play is moving fast.
- Frame as a Weapon: Her length and stride power combine to make her physically difficult to stop once she's moving. She doesn't skate around defenders to create separation — she skates through them, and her momentum carries the play forward rather than stalling at the point of contact.
Areas to Refine
- Stride Strength: Adding lower-body strength would put more force behind each push and increase both her top-end speed and her ability to accelerate through contact. The stride mechanics are already there — more power behind them would make the separation she creates even harder to close.
- Edge Work: Tightening her edgework would give her the ability to carve through pressure and open new lanes rather than skating around defenders. Sharper edges on cuts and turns would add a dimension to her skating that her current stride efficiency doesn't yet provide.
- Shift-End Conditioning: Lauren's skating is strongest early in a shift. Building the conditioning to make her final strides look like her first would extend her effectiveness into the situations coaches lean on her most — late in periods, late in games, and on back-to-back shifts against tough matchups.
Key Strengths
- One-Hand Control: Lauren keeps the puck alive through contact with one hand on her stick — her frame does the defensive work while her hand keeps the puck moving. The checker gets a body but not the puck.
- Puck Placement: She holds the puck in the one spot defenders can't reach — away from the stick, tight to her hip, positioned just outside the circle of pressure. It doesn't move dramatically because it doesn't need to.
- Body Before Stick: Before the puck moves, her body does — a shoulder drop, a weight shift, a subtle lean that pulls the defender's eyes off the puck. By the time the checker has read the body, the puck is already gone.
- Handles Through Hits: She doesn't protect the puck by avoiding contact — she takes the hit and comes out the other side with possession. That willingness to absorb a collision rather than skate around it keeps plays alive that would otherwise end at the point of contact.
- Reads the Checker: Lauren doesn't react to pressure — she reads it. She watches the checker's stick, their weight, their angle, and she moves the puck at the exact moment they've committed to the wrong read. The checker arrives where the puck was, not where it is.
Areas to Refine
- Disguise Intentions: Lauren's stickhandling doesn't yet include enough deception to freeze defenders before she attacks. Adding a deliberate shoulder fake, a hesitation, or a half-beat puck hold before moving would turn her strength-driven control into an offensive weapon rather than purely a possession tool.
- Tight-Area Creativity: Her stickhandling is most effective when she has room to use her body. Developing more variety in tight spaces — particularly when the lane is closing and a quick move is needed — would give her options beyond protecting the puck and waiting for the pressure to ease.
- 1-on-1 Threat: Lauren doesn't currently present as a player who will beat a defender off the rush with a move. Developing one or two reliable 1-on-1 sequences — not flash, but a repeatable threat — would force defenders to respect her hands the same way they already respect her body.
Key Strengths
- Perimeter Creation: Lauren can move the puck from the outside with timing and awareness — she delays to let lanes develop rather than forcing the first option, which gives her linemates time to get into position before the pass arrives.
- Below-the-Line Vision: Lauren reads the slot from below the goal line — she sees which stick is lifted, which skate has shifted, and which lane has cracked open, and she puts the puck through it before the defender has finished rotating.
- Finds the Second Option: When the first passing lane closes, Lauren's eyes have already moved to the next one. She doesn't reset or stall — she's scanning while she handles, which means her second option is ready before the first one has fully disappeared.
- Tight-Area Touches: In close quarters, Lauren delivers the puck through gaps that exist for less than a second — a slip between skates, a nudge through a lifted stick, a touch feed that arrives exactly when the receiver can do something with it. These aren't improvised — they're reads she's already made before the puck gets to her.
- Holds Until It Opens: Lauren doesn't force the pass when the lane is closing — she holds the puck, keeps her eyes moving, and waits for the coverage to shift before committing to the delivery. That patience under pressure is what separates a clean tape-to-tape feed from a pass that gets picked off mid-flight.
Areas to Refine
- Perimeter-to-Slot Speed: Lauren's passes from the perimeter are accurate but occasionally arrive a beat late for the receiver to get a shot away cleanly. Getting the puck off faster from the outside — particularly when her linemate is already in motion toward the slot — would increase the number of those passes that generate immediate looks.
- Back-Door Delivery: Lauren reads the back door but doesn't always pull the trigger on that pass when it's available. Committing to that delivery more consistently — particularly when her linemate has already beaten the defender to the post — would add a high-percentage option to her distribution game.
- Lift the Puck: Lauren's passing game operates primarily at ice level. Developing the ability to elevate passes over sticks and skates — particularly in traffic and on cross-ice feeds — would give her a delivery that tight defensive structures can't neutralise by simply putting a stick on the ice.
Key Strengths
- Snap Shot Accuracy: Lauren's snap shot puts the puck exactly where she's aiming — she picks a corner and hits it. The placement is deliberate regardless of the situation, which means good scoring positions produce goals rather than shots the goalie reads cleanly and covers.
- Rush Shot: She can release off the rush without breaking stride — the shot gets off clean and on target before the goalie has had time to fully set. That ability to shoot in motion rather than stopping to set up makes her a genuine threat every time she has the puck in open ice.
- Inside Edge Release: Lauren loads and fires off her inside edge without resetting her feet — she shoots from positions that don't look like shooting positions until the puck is already in the air. That ability to release from an unconventional base opens up angles that her skating alone doesn't create.
- Opportunist Finisher: A rim that takes a bad bounce, a scramble that leaves the puck sitting, a broken clear that finds her blade — Lauren converts those moments because she's already positioned for them. The goalie is still relocating when the shot arrives.
- Shoots Without Tells: Lauren carries and shoots from the same body position — there's no wind-up, no postural shift, no change in her skating pattern that signals a shot is coming. The puck leaves her blade before the goalie has been given anything to read.
Areas to Refine
- One-Timer Timing: The high-slot set play her team runs puts Lauren in prime scoring position, and when she connects her mechanics look clean. Making that connection more consistent — timing the release to the exact moment the puck arrives rather than a beat after — would turn an occasional threat into a reliable weapon on every set play her team runs.
- Shot Release Points: Lauren currently releases from predictable positions. Developing the ability to shoot from a wider range of release points — off her back foot, off a lateral move, or from tighter angles — would make her shot harder to track and increase the number of situations where she can threaten without first creating separation.
- Shoot Through Traffic: Lauren's shot is most effective when she has a clear lane to the net. Learning to release through a stick or a body — trusting that the puck will find its way — would extend her shooting threat into the high-traffic situations where the most dangerous scoring chances actually live.
Situational Play
Key Strengths
- Breakout Timing: Lauren reads motion-based breakout patterns cleanly and times her support to match the pace of the play. When the breakout runs through her, the group moves up ice with real force rather than stalling at the line.
- Carries with Conviction: When the breakout puts the puck on her stick, she doesn't hesitate — she carries it with enough pace and purpose that the forecheck can't close her angle before she's already through the line.
- Stretches the Middle: Her carry pulls coverage toward her and the middle opens behind it. Linemates cutting into that space find it available because Lauren has already drawn the attention away from it.
- Flow-System Fit: Lauren's instincts match naturally with systems built on movement and possession. She makes quick decisions, reads space accurately, and connects with linemates who are already in motion — the play doesn't slow down when it runs through her.
- Offensive Zone Structure: Inside possession-based systems in the offensive zone, Lauren cycles, supports, and distributes in a way that keeps the structure alive rather than breaking it down with low-percentage decisions.
Areas to Refine
- System Versatility: Lauren's instincts are strongest inside motion-based systems. Building comfort in more structured, position-locked schemes — where the reads are more prescribed and less reactive — would make her a more complete system player across a wider range of coaching styles.
- Weak-Side Structure: Inside systems, Lauren's positioning is strongest on the strong side and through the middle. Holding her weak-side structure more consistently — particularly when the puck cycles away from her — would keep her team's formation tighter and reduce the gaps opponents find on the back side.
- Strong-Side Reads Under Pressure: Lauren's system reads are sharpest when her team has the puck and the play is moving at pace. When the system breaks down under pressure and the structure requires her to hold a specific lane or assignment, tightening those reads would make her more reliable when the play gets difficult.
Key Strengths
- Lets It Breathe: Lauren doesn't rush power play possessions — she holds the puck until the right lane develops and delivers it at the moment it produces a real chance rather than simply moving it to relieve pressure.
- Drawing Coverage: On the power play, Lauren moves without the puck in a way that pulls penalty killers toward her position. Defenders track her movement and shift their coverage — and the lanes that open as a result are where the dangerous touches go.
- Hides Intentions: On the power play, Lauren conceals her passing reads until the last possible moment. The puck moves before the coverage has had time to shift and close the lane she's already identified.
- Delivers to the Scorer: When a natural finisher gets open, Lauren finds them at the exact moment they can release. The pass arrives when the chance is real — not early enough to kill the shot, not late enough to give the penalty killer time to close.
- Moves the Unit: Lauren's sequence of drawing, holding, and delivering shifts the penalty kill's structure before the pass is made. By the time the puck moves, the formation has already been reorganised around where she wanted it to go.
Areas to Refine
- Shot Threat: Lauren's power play presence is built around distribution. Adding a more credible shot threat from her position — so penalty killers have to respect both the pass and the shot simultaneously — would make her harder to defend and open more of the lanes she's already finding.
- Entry Role: Lauren's power play impact is strongest once possession is established. Developing a more active role in the zone entry itself — carrying or receiving on the way in rather than setting up after — would extend her influence from the moment the man advantage begins.
- Shooting Lanes: When Lauren does shoot on the power play, she doesn't always find the most dangerous release point available to her. Identifying and attacking the shooting lane that gives her the best angle before she receives the puck would increase the threat her shot produces when she does pull the trigger.
Key Strengths
- Early Lane Control: Lauren gets into passing and skating lanes early — before the puck carrier has decided where it's going. That positioning takes away options before they form rather than reacting after the decision has been made.
- Calculated Pressure: She doesn't chase the puck on the penalty kill — she closes with a read behind her pressure, staying in position to recover if the puck moves before she gets there. The pressure is deliberate, not desperate.
- Active Stick: Her stick is in lanes and on puck carriers consistently enough that touches get disrupted before they're clean. She doesn't need to win a full puck battle to affect the play — partial contact and lane presence are enough to take quality looks away.
- Stride as a Weapon: Lauren uses her first-step explosiveness to close on puck carriers before they've found their next look. She arrives fast enough that the pass leaves before the carrier has identified where it's going — which is exactly the kind of rushed touch that breaks a power play's rhythm.
- Holds Structure Under Stress: When her team is on the back foot and the power play is applying sustained pressure, Lauren holds her lane and stays connected to the structure rather than gambling for a turnover. That discipline keeps the unit intact when the play gets difficult.
Areas to Refine
- Force the Clear: Lauren's penalty kill presence is strongest in disrupting the setup. Developing a more active role in forcing clears — angling carriers toward the wall and closing hard enough to create a bad touch or a rushed shot — would add a direct impact play to her penalty kill game.
- Shooting Lane Coverage: Lauren is effective in passing lanes but doesn't consistently close shooting lanes against point shots. Getting her body into those lanes more reliably — particularly on one-timer setups — would reduce the clean looks her opponents generate from the blue line.
- Transition Off the Kill: When the penalty kill produces a turnover or a clear, Lauren doesn't always convert that momentum into an immediate offensive threat. Reading those transition moments earlier — and attacking them with the same pace she brings to her even-strength game — would turn penalty kill stops into scoring chances going the other way.
Key Strengths
- Reads the Moment: Lauren identifies what the next play requires before it fully develops — she sees the available space, reads where the puck is going, and is already moving into position before the play has arrived at the spot she's heading to.
- Score-State Adjustment: When the score changes the demands of the shift, Lauren's decisions reflect it. She holds the puck longer and moves it shorter when the lead needs protecting — and attacks space and drives possession when her team needs to generate.
- Doesn't Force the Play: In high-leverage situations where the play tightens, Lauren keeps the puck moving within the structure — she makes the short pass, holds the cycle, and stays connected to her linemates rather than trying to create something individually out of a broken situation.
- Creates Under Pressure: When her team needs to generate and the play isn't coming to her, Lauren goes and gets it — she drives a puck battle, attacks a lane, or moves to a position that forces the defence to account for her. The response is physical and immediate, not passive.
- Matchup Recognition: Lauren identifies when a defender is giving her a speed edge or a physical mismatch and adjusts her route to attack it directly. She doesn't wait for the play to come to her — she skates at the advantage she's already spotted.
Areas to Refine
- Dictate the Shift: Lauren responds to what the game asks of her but doesn't yet consistently control the pace of a shift herself. Getting on pucks earlier, moving them faster, and attacking space before the defence has set would put her in a position to drive the tempo rather than match it.
- Exploit the Matchup Earlier: Lauren recognises matchup advantages but doesn't always act on them quickly enough. Identifying and attacking those edges earlier in the shift — before the defender has had time to adjust — would turn reads she's already making into more consistent offensive results.
- Trust Her Read: There are moments where Lauren has already identified the right lane, the right time to pressure, or the right moment to hold — and takes an extra beat before committing. Cutting that hesitation would turn reads she's already making into plays that happen a full second earlier and at a pace defenders can't close on.
Mental Game
Key Strengths
- Defense-First Instinct: Lauren's reads start from the back of the play and work forward. In her own zone, she knows what her assignment is before the puck arrives — and she executes without waiting for the situation to confirm what she already saw developing.
- Transitional Intelligence: She reads shift changes in the game's momentum before they fully materialize. Whether the play is turning over in her end, moving through the neutral zone, or breaking open in the offensive zone, her positioning is already adjusted to what's coming rather than reacting to what just happened.
- Playmaker Lens: Her offensive zone reads run through a distributor's eye first. She scans for the scorer, finds the lane, and moves the puck at the moment it produces a real chance — not simply because a passing option exists.
- Role Execution: Assign Lauren a zone responsibility and she handles the full scope of it. Low in the defensive zone, wide through the neutral, high in the offensive zone as a distributor — she doesn't simplify the job to match her comfort level. She does the whole thing.
- Immediate Coachability: Her hockey sense shows up most clearly in how rarely she needs correction twice. She makes the right play, understands the timing behind it, and replicates it without a reminder. Coaches feel that immediately.
Areas to Refine
- Read Ahead: Lauren's hockey sense solves problems as they arrive. The next level is acting on reads early enough that the problem never fully forms — moving into position, making the decision, or moving the puck before the defensive structure has finished setting rather than after it's already applied.
- Decision Speed: Her reads through the offensive zone are accurate but the decision occasionally arrives a beat behind the pace of the play. Having the mental picture set before the puck reaches her — so the choice is already made when possession lands — would close the gap between a strong read and an immediate scoring threat.
- Processing Under Pressure: When the forecheck traps her defence and the breakout structure collapses, Lauren's decision speed drops a half-beat. Identifying her outlet before the puck arrives — rather than scanning after she has it — would keep her moving the play forward at the same pace she manages when the structure is intact.
Key Strengths
- Targeted Engine: Lauren's compete level isn't constant noise — it's selective pressure applied at the right moments. She knows when to turn the volume up and when the game doesn't need it, and that judgment makes her threat unpredictable rather than manageable.
- Creates When It Matters: When the opportunity to break something open is real, Lauren acts on it immediately and fully. She doesn't half-commit to battles that can be won. That read — knowing which moments are worth everything — is what separates smart competitors from passive ones.
- Threat Without the Puck: Because opponents know she can separate at any moment, they defend her differently even when she doesn't have the puck. That latent threat compresses the ice for her linemates and creates space she never has to physically generate.
- Composure as Competitiveness: Her compete level is disguised in how settled she looks. She doesn't telegraph intensity with emotion — she expresses it through pace, through routes, through puck battles that finish on her terms. Competitiveness that reads as composure is the hardest kind to defend against.
- Conserves Without Fading: When the game doesn't require chaos, Lauren dials back without fading from the play. She's still involved, still a presence — but she's not burning her edge on moments that don't need it. The burst is there when the shift actually demands it.
Areas to Refine
- Attack the Opening: Lauren identifies the moment to create accurately — she just doesn't always attack it the instant it appears. Committing to that window one beat earlier, before the defender has finished reading the play, would turn opportunities she's already spotting into ones the defence has no time to close.
- Quiet Stretches: Lauren's engine runs cleanest when the shift gives her clear moments to work with. On shifts where the game stays compressed and the opening hasn't come yet, maintaining the same edge through the full 45 seconds — rather than waiting for the play to give her something — would extend her competitive impact into the situations that don't announce themselves.
- Defensive Details: Lauren's compete level is most visible when there's offensive upside attached to the battle. The board fight that protects field position, the defensive-zone battle that keeps possession alive — those deserve the same output. Raising her compete level equally on both sides of the puck would make the full weight of her game felt in every zone, every shift.
Key Strengths
- Doesn't Externalize: Bad bounces, tough calls, momentum swings — none of it surfaces visibly. Lauren absorbs whatever the game throws without letting it change her expression, her body language, or the quality of her next touch. The frustration, if there is any, stays internal and brief.
- Gives Her Line Poise: Her steadiness becomes a reference point for the players around her. When the crowd swings against her team or the shift turns heavy in their end, she stays engaged and unbothered — and that quiet signal helps her linemates settle before they've even had a moment to spiral.
- Pressure Doesn't Change Her: The biggest moments don't produce a different version of Lauren. She plays the same way in the final minute with the lead as she does in the opening shift — same decisions, same pace, same willingness to compete. That consistency under pressure is the foundation coaches build around.
- Noise Doesn't Find Her: External pressure — opponent physicality, crowd momentum, a difficult period — doesn't get through. She plays inside her own environment regardless of what's happening around it, which keeps her effective in exactly the situations where most players become unreliable.
- Holds the Bench: Her emotional control doesn't just protect her own game — it stabilizes the group. Players naturally read each other during difficult stretches, and when they look down the bench and see Lauren composed, the collective response reflects it.
Areas to Refine
- Channel It Outward: Lauren's emotional control is a genuine strength, but the next step is learning to channel that composure into active communication rather than quiet steadiness. The same calmness that settles the bench could be used to direct it — turning internal control into outward leadership.
- Let the Edge Show: There are moments where Lauren's composure reads as neutral when her team would benefit from a visible spark. Learning to express controlled intensity — not frustration, but presence — in specific situations would give her line an emotional lift without disrupting the steadiness she brings.
- Physical Confrontation: Lauren's emotional control holds cleanly when the game is moving at pace. In physical confrontations and board battles where the game slows and the moment gets personal, maintaining that same level without retreating from the physical edge would make her control complete across every situation she faces.
Key Strengths
- Wipes It Clean: When a shift goes sideways — a turnover, a missed assignment, a goal against — Lauren resets without theatrics. The mistake doesn't travel into the next shift. The next touch gets the same focus and the same pace as if nothing happened.
- Resets Through Performance: Her recovery mechanism isn't passive. It's the next puck battle, the next route, the next decision made quickly and cleanly. She rebuilds through action rather than waiting for her confidence to return on its own.
- Shortens the Window: Most young players carry the weight of a mistake longer than the shift that produced it. Lauren's emotional window closes almost immediately. That brevity keeps her effective across the full game — including the moments that come right after the hardest ones.
- Handles Elimination Stakes: Late in close games, when a mistake carries real consequence, Lauren's next shift looks the same as her first. The situation doesn't change her pace, her decision-making, or her willingness to compete for the next puck. That consistency is what coaches find out about players in the hardest moments of the season.
- Keeps Her Line Moving: Her reset ability extends outward. When a mistake happens and she's already back in the play, her linemates follow the signal. The group moves forward because she moves forward first.
Areas to Refine
- Mid-Shift Recovery: Lauren's reset ability is clearest between shifts. Inside a shift, when a mistake happens and the play is still live, the emotional recovery occasionally costs her half a second she doesn't have. Tightening the mid-shift reset — so the next read is just as sharp after an in-play mistake as it would be at the start of the next shift — would make her more complete across the full 45 seconds.
- Direct the Group: Lauren resets quickly and gets back into the play — but she doesn't yet direct the players around her who haven't. A word on the bench to a linemate still carrying a mistake, a short instruction between periods to reset a linemate's focus on a specific task — that's the habit that turns her individual recovery into something the whole line benefits from.
Game Film & Highlights
| Date | Opponent | Game Type | Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-2026 | - | Highlights | ▶ Watch Film |
| Feb 22, 2026 | Brampton Canadettes | Season | ▶ Watch Film |
| Feb 15, 2026 | Durham West Lightning | Season | ▶ Watch Film |
| Dec 5, 2025 | Bishop Kearney Selects | Showcase | ▶ Watch Film |
| Dec 5, 2025 | Honeybaked | Showcase | ▶ Watch Film |
| Oct 19, 2025 | Oakville Hornets | Season | ▶ Watch Film |
| September 2025 | - | Highlights | ▶ Watch Film |
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Frequently Asked Questions
- After hockey, Lauren is looking to pursue a career in math or science, with plans to continue into grad school. She also wants to travel to different countries and explore National Parks across North America.
- Outside of hockey, Lauren enjoys hiking, camping, pickleball, golf, skiing, and water sports. She likes being outdoors and spending time with friends and family.
- Lauren trains with Cody Crichton for on-ice skills development and is enrolled in the hockey program at St. Martin Catholic Secondary School.
- Lauren works at the Toronto Golf Club, holds a CPR certification, and has volunteered at a food bank for two summers.