Generated by GPT-5-mini| Brock Boeser | |
|---|---|
| Name | Brock Boeser |
| Birth date | November 25, 1997 |
| Birth place | Burnsville, Minnesota, United States |
| Height | 6 ft 1 in |
| Weight | 195 lb |
| Position | Right wing |
| Shoots | Right |
| League | NHL |
| Team | Vancouver Canucks |
| Former teams | University of North Dakota |
| National team | United States |
| Draft | 23rd overall, 2015 |
| Draft team | Vancouver Canucks |
| Career start | 2017 |
Brock Boeser is an American professional ice hockey right wing who plays in the National Hockey League. He was selected 23rd overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft and emerged as a top goal scorer for his club early in his career. Boeser has represented the United States at international tournaments and is noted for his shot and scoring instincts.
Born in Burnsville, Minnesota, Boeser moved to nearby Burnsville and later grew up in rural Burnsville and Worthington, Minnesota, before developing in the junior circuits around Minneapolis and the Upper Midwest. He played youth hockey within the Minnesota development system and for high school programs influenced by local rivals such as Shattuck-Saint Mary's and Blaine High School (Minnesota), while contemporaries included prospects from United States Hockey League feeder programs. Boeser advanced to the United States Hockey League with the Sioux City Musketeers and later committed to collegiate hockey at the University of North Dakota, joining a lineage of NHL alumni including Jonathan Toews, Zach Parise, and T. J. Oshie. At North Dakota Boeser played under coach Dave Hakstol and alongside teammates who would reach the NHL, competing against programs from the Big Ten Conference and the National Collegiate Hockey Conference.
After his selection by the Vancouver Canucks in 2015, Boeser signed an entry-level contract and made his NHL debut in the 2017–18 season. He immediately established himself on a roster that featured players such as Henrik Sedin, Daniel Sedin, Elias Pettersson, and Sven Bärtschi, finishing among team leaders in goals and earning recognition like the Calder Memorial Trophy conversation in some media. During his tenure with Vancouver he produced multiple 20-plus goal campaigns and played under coaches including Travis Green and management figures like Jim Benning and Patrik Allvin. Boeser's career has included time on power-play units with teammates J.T. Miller, Brock Boeser, Tanner Pearson, and line combinations against divisional rivals such as the Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, and San Jose Sharks. Injuries, including a back injury and a high-ankle sprain, interrupted several seasons, leading to periods on injured reserve and stints on conditioning assignments coordinated with the American Hockey League affiliates and medical staff. Notable moments include game-winning goals and milestone point totals, and he reached contract negotiations culminating in a multi-year deal to remain in Vancouver while the team pursued playoff berths against squads like the Vegas Golden Knights and Colorado Avalanche.
Boeser has represented the United States at under-18 and senior levels, participating in tournaments alongside prospects from the Canadian Hockey League and European leagues. He was selected for Team USA rosters in international competitions, competing against national teams including Canada, Sweden, Finland, and Russia. His international appearances placed him in events organized by bodies such as the International Ice Hockey Federation and showcased him with compatriots who have NHL experience like Auston Matthews, Jack Eichel, and Nick Schmaltz.
Boeser is widely recognized for a quick, accurate wrist and one-timer shot and for his goal-scoring instincts developed in Minnesota and collegiate systems. Scouts compared aspects of his release and scoring touch to established finishers in the NHL, noting his shot repertoire in evaluations by analysts covering the NHL Scouting Combine and amateur draft processes. Critics and commentators—writing in outlets that cover the National Hockey League, the Hockey Hall of Fame narratives, and team beat reporting—have discussed his strengths on the power play, positional sense, and areas for development such as puck possession and defensive zone battles. Coaches and teammates have highlighted his shot in practices alongside veteran forwards like Bo Horvat and Jannik Hansen, while opposing defensemen from clubs such as the Anaheim Ducks and New York Rangers have had to game-plan against his shooting threat.
Boeser comes from a hockey family; his father and relatives were involved in regional hockey and athletic programs in Minnesota and the Upper Midwest. Outside of hockey, he has participated in community events alongside teammates and charitable partners including local chapters tied to the National Hockey League Players' Association and Canucks community initiatives. He maintains connections to the University of North Dakota alumni network and remains a visible figure in Northwest American hockey circles.
Category:1997 births Category:Living people Category:American ice hockey right wingers Category:Vancouver Canucks players