I watched his video breakdown of Lev and he is very critical as well as including a comparison to a Montreal draft pick, which goes off the rails a bit. Then he recently put out a video on Sennecke and it's like 180° video where it's roses everywhere.
But reading his scouting report on Lev, the guy goes flips back and forth on Lev. I don't believe he knows that Lev was an OFD trying to become a 2-way D whereas Reinbacher is a DFD trying to become a 2-way D. He calls Lev not competitive partially comparing him to Reinbacher, but then identifies that Lev is actually communicating nonverbally all the time on the ice that Lev is like a coach on the ice. He dings Lev's offense for being simple and very efficient as opposed to going 1v1 like a Parekh or Yakemchuk, but also dings Lev's defense... yet Lev the team in +/- as a rookie in the NCAA. In his conclusion, he give importance to Lev's tool box for his defense than his offense. Also in his conclusion, he only focuses on Lev's D+0 season as he doesn't identify Lev's improvement defensively between his USHL and NCAA seasons. From his write up:
"Levshunov won’t have been one of my favorites this season, but when I look at the projection of his toolbox, I give more importance to the impact he will have defensively than other players can achieve with the puck. He was in his first steps in the NCAA and it remains possible that he will improve in the coming years."
It feels like he doesn't want to give Lev's improvement over the season as his early season scouting really stuck on him, especially when being compared to Reinbacher. St. Simon just doesn't want to let go. But his video scouting review on Sennecke is all roses and his write up on Sennecke. Here's what St. Simon wrote up for Sennecke:
"As mentioned in the introduction, Sennecke’s progression curve wasn’t all Smooth Sailing. At the start of the second half of the season, he was demoted from his line and his playing time decreased. At times, his time on the power play was even taken away (at least, a good part of it). On the other hand, when you draft a player, it is not based on what he looked like in February. You draft him for the promise he showed at the end of the season and for the future.
It is also true that Sennecke did not have a very productive season offensively. This worried me myself during the year. Especially since I consider that the OHL, overall, is possibly weaker than what we were used to before. Decent players, nothing more, accumulated very inflated statistics at times, and on the other hand, I watched Sennecke, who is much more talented, struggling to have more than a point per game. The big click happened when we paired him with Calum Ritchie. I understand people being concerned based on this fact, however, when we look at Sennecke’s individual skills, we have the right to expect him to be placed with the best offensive elements of his tea, so, in the end, does it really matter if his offensive production wasn’t so good during the regular season?"
What a huge difference in scouting between the two prospects! Sennecke's late scoring binge only happened because of another player raising his game. Lev was carrying his team offensively and defensively as well as improved his game throughout the NCAA season! So Sennecke's is ranked higher than Lev because of a small sample surge that only occurred by being paired with a talented team player in Calum Ritchie. A top-5 pick that needs talent to carry him instead of him carrying the team is sus.
I am in awe of his detailed scouting, but turned away with is biases simultaneously.