Growing up in the Strome household in Mississauga, Ontario, wasn't always easy for Matthew.
"Matt was always fighting for space and fighting for his hierarchy in the family," Ryan Strome said. "I think he and my brother were the ones who really went at it because they were only two years apart. I remember them just killing each other."
Matthew usually served as the goalie when the three brothers played road hockey.
"I'd be the one getting shots fired at me," Matthew said. "I think it helped me get to where I am now, toughened me up. I know I can take [stuff] from anybody and play back hard.
"My brothers are having amazing careers, and just from watching them with how they play and the things they do, I just try to feed off that stuff."
The one area the youngest Strome seeks improvement is his skating.
"I know what it takes; both my brothers were criticized for their skating and they worked extremely hard to get to where they are now, so I'm going to do the same thing and keep working every day in the summer," he said.
Gruden has seen the work Strome has put in to become a well-rounded skater.
"People need to understand he has the pedigree of two other brothers who were high-end, who have played at a high level in the OHL, and Matthew scored at a great clip," Gruden said. "You look at [Los Angeles Kings center] Tyler Toffoli and [Anaheim Ducks right wing] Corey Perry, who slipped because of skating.
"At the end of the day, you can't teach goal scoring and where Matthew is projected, it's a no-brainer. His upside is so high; someone is going to get a really good player."
Strome averaged 18-20 minutes of ice time and skated most of the season with center Niki Petti and right wing Matt Luff [Los Angeles Kings].
"Do I think there's pressure on him? Absolutely I do but there's pressure on all these athletes, whether you have two brothers or not," Gruden said. "To me, though, there's almost less pressure when you have brothers in it, are part of it and can help you with struggles and successes. I'm sure there's pressure but he's a great kid and I don't see him showing pressure. He has a smile on his face 24 hours a day, he loves going to the rink. He's as fun a kid as you can have on your team."