Jean-Luc Foudy is carving his own path to becoming a professional hockey player, though he also has an excellent role model to follow with older brother
Liam Foudy
, who was selected by the Columbus Blue Jackets with the No. 18 pick in the 2018 NHL Draft.
"He's a fast hockey player and I think I have that same attribute of playing fast," Jean-Luc Foudy said of his 20-year-old brother. "He uses his speed well, so I kind of watched him growing up, saw what kind of moves he would make with his speed and I think I've taken a couple of those into my own game."
Whatever Jean-Luc has added to his repertoire, it's been working. The center from Windsor in the Ontario Hockey League is No. 33 in NHL Central Scouting's final ranking of North American skaters.
"I think we're similar in speed," Liam Foudy said. "We both try to control our game by how fast we skate and the big thing that he's always been good about is how he sees the ice. He's always been known as a great passer and he gets guys open by the way he creates open ice with his speed so he can find guys easily like that."
Jean-Luc Foudy (5-foot-11, 177 pounds), had 43 points (15 goals, 28 assists) in 59 games this season. He led Windsor with two overtime goals and was second with four game-winning goals.
"He's a unique player," Windsor coach Trevor Letowski said. "Everyone talks about his skating. In junior he's a breakout machine, he's got like a magnet on his stick, like the crafty players in the NHL. He can just kind of steal pucks out of traffic and come out with it. As soon as he can figure out when he can distribute it and then skate to places to get the puck back is when he's really going to be dangerous."
Jean-Luc and Liam don't have to look far to see where their love for athletics and competition come from. Their father, Sean Foudy, played defensive back in the Canadian Football League for six seasons (1989-94). Their mother, France Gareau, won a silver medal for Canada in the 4x100 relay at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
"There weren't many friendly games between us," Liam said. "Everything we did was very competitive, from video games to athletic sports. We always worked really hard, pushed each other to be better, and now that he's in the OHL we work out a lot in the summers and push each other to be better and it's great to have that competitiveness with someone you're really close with."