Oscar Rouillard Scouting Report: Why the 6'6 WCPA Guard Is One of British Columbia's Most Complete Prospects
- Josh Millican
- 1 day ago
- 3 min read

Every scout has a type.
For me, it's players who make the game easier for everyone around them.
Players who understand spacing. Players who can create advantages. Players who force defensive rotations and then punish them for it. Players who can score when they need to but don't stop the offense just because they touched the ball.
Oscar Rouillard checks every one of those boxes.
The 6-foot-6 guard from North Vancouver, British Columbia, currently suiting up for GOOD Hoops and WCPA at the prep level, is one of those prospects who continues to grow on you the more you watch him. I saw him in person last fall and have been keeping tabs on his development throughout the season. Every time I tune in, I walk away with the same thought:
This kid just plays the game the right way.
When the shot is there, he takes it confidently. When defenders get too aggressive closing out, he attacks immediately. Give him a lane and he'll get downhill. Cut him off and he'll make the next read. Play him too tightly and he has the athleticism to get to the baseline and elevate above the rim.
That's where Rouillard becomes particularly interesting as a prospect.
A lot of players can score. Not many consistently create advantages.
Oscar does.
He's the type of player who forces defenses into that extra rotation. He gets two defenders committed to him, makes the correct read and suddenly a teammate is getting a clean catch-and-shoot opportunity. Those plays don't always show up in highlight packages, but college coaches notice them immediately.
At 6-foot-6, he has ideal positional size for a guard and enough strength to continue adding versatility as he develops physically. If you're projecting him at the two spot long-term, there's a lot to like. He has the frame, the motor and the skill set modern basketball demands.
He's also a true box-checker.
Need shooting? He can knock it down from beyond the arc at a high clip.
Need athleticism? He plays well above the rim.
Need another ball handler? He can operate as a secondary initiator and keep the offense organized.
Need defense? He competes and has the physical tools to impact the game on that end of the floor as well.
The deeper you get into evaluating him, the harder it becomes to find weaknesses that significantly limit his projection.
But what may stand out most isn't even a basketball skill.
It's who he is.
Every interaction I've had and every conversation I've heard about Oscar points back to the same thing: he's a great kid. A real salt-of-the-earth person with a level head on his shoulders and a mature approach to both basketball and life. Talent gets players noticed. Character keeps doors open.
Those traits matter.
As evaluators, we're constantly searching for prospects who combine production, upside and intangibles. Rouillard checks all three categories.
I'll get another live look at him this September, and I'm looking forward to seeing how his game continues to evolve. If his trajectory continues on its current path, I wouldn't be surprised to see more coaches start paying close attention.
Because in a basketball world full of specialists, Oscar Rouillard is proving he can do a little bit of everything.
And those are usually the players who find a way to stick.




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