And that’s where we transition into the massive red flags. Merkley has been a prodigy for much of his lifetime, and he was drafted first overall in the OHL Draft back in 2016. Some scouts believe his success has led to a certain level of arrogance and entitlement. The “character concerns” tag has a wide berth of meanings. Sometimes it’s a total lost cause such as Johnny Manziel. Other times it’s a rigid, humorless curmudgeon complaining about PK Subban daring to be fun and personable. I reached out to an Ontario area scout for a gauge on where Merkley lies.
“He’s just a s***head, and I’m his biggest fan,” the source said.
As previously shown, Merkley often abdicates himself of defensive responsibility. He gets pouty and abrasive on the ice when things don’t go his team’s way, and that carries over off the ice. He does not have any signature moments of blatantly infantile behavior, as
Tony DeAngelo does, but on a day-to-day basis Merkley is a bigger headache not just for his coaches, but his peers as well. It got bad enough this past season that
Guelph scratched him as a disciplinary measure at time when he was the team’s leading scorer.
“Tony has the maturity of a 15 year old. Ryan has the maturity of a 12 year old. At least teammates could tolerate (
DeAngelo),” the source said.