Jack Hughes has been Levi's teammate for the past two seasons at Northeastern. They were living together for summer school when Hughes was in Buffalo for the NHL Scouting Combine last June.
Hughes, a second-round draft pick by Los Angeles, said he had never seen anything quite like Levi's dedication to hockey. Their days at summer school started with a lift around 7:30 a.m. Levi would go to class until about 3:30 p.m., stop by the room until 4 o'clock, then head to the rink.
"I'll be in bed before he gets back from the rink some nights," Hughes said.
Owen Power had a similar takeaway from his experience playing with Levi for Canada at the Beijing Olympics in 2022. Power and Levi bonded as two of the youngest players on the team.
"For him, everything seems to be hockey," Power said recently. "Everything he does seems to have something to do with hockey."
That's not completely true. Levi is a gifted student, a class valedictorian in high school and a computer science major at Northeastern. His coursework last summer, Hughes said, included a coding class. He plays the piano and is loved by teammates for his childlike humor.
One of Levi's gifts is how he applies his cerebral nature to the development of what he described earlier this month as his one true passion: stopping pucks. It was a quality Gerry Gomez saw when he first met Levi as a 9-year-old in the Lac St-Louis program.
"I think he was able to take his own player development into his own hands at a young age," Gomez, who coach in the Lac St-Louis development program, said.
Gomez recalled one pee-wee tournament in which Levi and the Lions had not performed well. Gomez asked Levi, maybe 13 years old at the time, if he felt he could have done anything differently. When Levi was unsure, Gomez pointed out that he had deviated from his pregame routine.
"I kind of hinted, 'Well, your pregame prep wasn't the same today as it usually was. I usually see you with the ball,' and this and that," Gomez said. "He skipped out on that that day, for whatever reason it was. He's a young kid, right?"
Levi, having graduated to bantam, recalled the moment to Gomez a year later and said he hadn't skipped that part of his routine since.
"He's so cerebral," Gomez said. "He's just a bright kid. He's aware."