"[Merkley] works his tail off every night and he's a guy who is ultra-competitive, so he's going to lead your team," said Guelph center Cameron Hillis, No. 67 on Central Scouting's final North American list. "He's a player I go to war with every night, and that's the most important thing."
Merkley said he wanted to play defense after watching his older sister, Lauren, play the position at Bemidji State University in Minnesota. Younger sister Karley, the only forward of the group, is committed to play at Harvard in 2018-19.
"Lauren is obviously someone I looked up to and she's a defenseman, and that's the reason I wanted to try the position," Merkley said. "I always went to her games, always practiced with her team. I looked up to her when I was younger; she was my role model."
Troy Dumville of NHL Central Scouting said Merkley isn't the first exceptionally skilled player to enter the draft with a few question marks pertaining to areas other than his play.
"At the end of the day, kids mature and I think teams realize that what you're getting at 17 is not what you're going to have at 22," Dumville said. "And if you look at what his potential might be as a 22-year-old, it's pretty attractive. If he matures, and his game comes to where you're hoping it does, you have yourself a pretty good hockey player and probably one drafted in a position lower than what his talent level really is."