Photo credit: Steve Dunsmoor
Best buddy steals Bedard road show

Cristall doesn’t play second fiddle to NHL draft phenom

Nov 30, 2022 | 6:00 AM

While consensus first-overall pick Connor Bedard’s stock likely didn’t fall with a quiet performance last night at Prospera Place, another draft-eligible player may have seen his stock rise – significantly.

Bedard, the WHL’s leading scorer earned an assist on a power play goal in overtime, lifting the Regina Pats to a 6-5 win over the Kelowna Rockets.

While extending his point streak to a league-leading 24 games, the best player on the ice was Kelowna Rockets sophomore forward Andrew Cristall, Bedard’s childhood friend.

The 17-year-old, who nine days ago was upgraded from a ‘B’ to an ‘A’ prospect by NHL Central Scouting for next summer’s draft, which essentially means consideration of being chosen in the first-round, chipped in with two goals and two assists in a losing cause.

Bedard, who has 54 points this season, now leads Cristall (43 points) by just 11 points for the league scoring title.

With over 64 hundred fans jammed inside the arena anticipating Bedard to skate through the Rockets’ defensive core like a hot knife through butter, it was Cristall that showed he can shoot, score, distribute the puck, and even apply body contact when required.

With over 40 NHL scouts watching the two draft-eligible players face each other for the lone time this season, unless they are on separate teams in January at the CHL Top Prospects in Langley, they left the arena impressed with the player who appears to be getting better with each showing.

As one observer told me after the game, if you didn’t know anything about the draft rankings, and were viewing Bedard and Cristall and comparing the two, you would think the Rockets’ leading scorer was projected to go first overall in Nashville, Tennessee this June, yet it is the other way around with Bedard a slam dunk to hear his name called first at the podium.

It is also fair to suggest Cristall had more to lose in the head-to-head matchup, so a poor showing could have been detrimental to his draft stock.

Scouts like to see players show up in big games. Cristall didn’t shrink under the pressure, he flourished.

In some respect, the game last night resembled a movie trailer on television that looks intriguing.

It is so eye-catching that you run out to watch it on the big screen with great anticipation only to find it a bit of a letdown.

Bedard came into the game, rightfully, with so much hype, yet outside of a few third-period shifts, the North Vancouver resident wasn’t overly dangerous.

You must give the Rockets’ d-core credit and especially 19-year-old Colton Dach, who could play with Bedard on Canada’s entry at the world junior hockey champions at Christmas, some props too.

Dach made sure Bedard never got loose, was hard on him all night, and was willing to take on the assignment of shutting down a lethal players, who oddly, was in the penalty box for slashing when Bedard assisted on the game-winning goal in overtime.

Clearly it was a subpar game for Connor Bedard.

It happens.

There was no damage done and his team skated away with a one goal win.

For Andrew Cristall, his draft stock value increased significantly despite his team losing on the scoreboard.

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  1. Nigel says:

    That is all fine and dandy. However, whilst Bruce goes out and brings in (yet) another over-age big strong forward, it is a shame that he did not bring in an over-age big strong defender instead. The Rockets has had no problem scoring goals – it is at the other end of the ice where they have problems, letting in goals from all angles and all distances. While the Rockets allegedly have two fine goalkeepers, the problem is the defenders in front of them. Part of the problem is mental strength. The game is (at least) a 60 minute game – not a 50 minute game, not a 55 minute game, but a 60 minute game. Players at both ends of the ice need to be reminded of this – Colton Dach’s miss in front of the Moose Jaw open net towards the end of the game, and the defenders seem to switch off in the closing part of numerous games this season has cost them a lot of points. A strong overage defender might have been a better choice of Mr Hamilton and not another big forward (though the goal that Calder scored last night was sweet )

  2. Ed says:

    WHAT are you smokin Nigel ?? Without Cristal we would be in dire straits for scoring, it’s the strength of our “D” men that have carried the team thus far !!