Markus, a left-shot center with the playmaker's brain and the older-brother birth certificate by eight minutes, led the WHL in scoring with 108 points (21 goals, 87 assists). Liam, the right-shot right wing and designated finisher, was right behind him with 104 points (45 goals, 59 assists). On most teams, that would be a remarkable one-two punch.
To the twins, it was family business.
And if this all sounds vaguely familiar, that's because the comparisons begin the second anyone hears the words twin brothers and Vancouver fans in the same sentence since the Sedin twins are unavoidable here.
The Rucks grew up in Osoyoos in British Columbia's scenic Okanagan Valley about four and a half hours from Vancouver, and they idolized Henrik and Daniel Sedin. Markus said they wore Sedin shirts around the house as kids. Medicine Hat coach Willie Desjardins also happens to be one of the few people on Earth with firsthand experience coaching elite twin forwards since he coached the Sedins in Vancouver from 2014-17.
"We hear the Sedin comparison a little bit," Markus said. "I don’t know if we deserve to be compared to them right now. Obviously, they're Hall of Famers."
Still, like the Sedins, the Rucks complement each other in obvious ways. Markus is the table-setter. Liam is the guy who clears the table by hammering the puck into the net.
"I think on the ice I'm more of a shoot-first guy, he's more of a pass-first guy, but I think there's a lot more similarities than differences between us," Liam said.
That chemistry isn't some supernatural twin telepathy, at least not according to Markus.
"I think it's just a lot of years spent together," he said. "We kind of know each other's tendencies on the ice."
The Rucks started skating when they were 2 years old on their backyard rink, and that led to the usual sibling competition. They admitted their mini-sticks games left holes in the wall and marks on the ceiling, which suggests either excellent hand-eye coordination or a total abandonment of indoor safety regulations.
"I don’t know how the (holes) in the ceiling got there, but the games got intense for sure," Liam said.