"He's a guy that really stepped in immediately and filled a role for their team and just consistently played the same way night in and night out," Joey Tenute of Central Scouting said. "He's a guy that of the whole 2004 [birth year] group, he's been one of the most consistent guys in terms of the game that he plays night in, night out. … Owen is of the guys that really carried the load for their team. He's a guy that the coach relied on in all situations, power play, penalty kill. He's one of the top face-off guys in the league.
"He's playing against top lines, and not only is he making it hard on other teams' top guys but also pushing back against them and becoming an offensive threat as well."
Beck said he tries to pattern his game after Vancouver Canucks center Bo Horvat, and Richmond sees that as an apt comparison.
"That's the guy that I compare him to the most, and NHL guys are starting to see it," Richmond said. "Bo Horvat, within his first couple years in the [OHL] didn't throw up 80, 90 points. Owen Beck in his first year had over 50 points, which is pretty darn good. I see him offensively maturing into a stronger player; defensively, he's learned a lot."
Though Richmond said he knew right from the start of this season Beck was capable of handling a big workload, Beck said it took him some time to get used to everything thrown at him after missing the previous season.
But early success led to more confidence, and that extra confidence led to even more success. It also helped that Mississauga (37-23-2-6) had a better season than predicted and finished fourth in the OHL Eastern Conference.
"We have a saying, team success equals individual success," Beck said.
His success also has come off the ice. Beck won the Bobby Smith Trophy as the top scholastic player in the OHL, with a school average above 93.0 percent in his grade 12 studies at Philip Pocock Catholic Secondary School in Mississauga. Among his classes were advanced functions, university chemistry, university biology, kinesiology and calculus.
Beck said there is a correlation between his proficiency in the classroom and on the ice.