RD Logan Hensler - USNTDP, USHL (2025 Draft)

  • Xenforo Cloud will be upgrading us to version 2.3.5 on March 3rd at 12 AM GMT. This version has increased stability and fixes several bugs. We expect downtime for the duration of the update. The admin team will continue to work on existing issues, templates and upgrade all necessary available addons to minimize impact of this new version. Click Here for Updates
Just an FYI, Big-10+ has a “condensed game” option that runs about 20-25 mins long and shows pretty much all shots on goal but definitely all high-danger chances and goals scored. I just spent the morning watching the games I missed, and you’re opinion that Hensler is a “detriment” on defense and responsible for “a ton” of mistakes was gross over-exaggeration and in some games not even factually correct.

I get you’re a STH, but I don’t agree with your assessment at all. As in, completely disagree with pretty much everything. Has he had bad shifts? Of course. But my takeaway is that he was no better or worse than any of his teammates.

Also, it’s pretty clear I’m not comparing Hughes or Werenski with Hensler beyond the simple fact that all were highly-rated defenders in their respective draft years.

I haven’t watched last night’s game but I’ll give a full shift-by-shift report on what I saw later today. I saw they got blown out so it’s more likely that everyone sucked, more or less.
You say that like it's a badge of honor. The other defensemen are not projected 1st round picks or former top draft picks. Most are long shots to be impact players in the AHL. Laatsch was/is the most defensively sound player on the team. Probably why they stuck Hensler next to him to start the year...

How do you explain this disparity:
1740343725157.png


Kehrer has virtually the same offensive impact and isn't bleeding goals against.

Anyways... It's clear, no matter what I say, that you've made up your mind. Good day.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: Hockeyville USA
You say that like it's a badge of honor. The other defensemen are not projected 1st round picks or former top draft picks. Most are long shots to be impact players in the AHL. Laatsch was/is the most defensively sound player on the team. Probably why they stuck Hensler next to him to start the year...

How do you explain this disparity:
View attachment 981540

Kehrer has virtually the same offensive impact and isn't bleeding goals against.

Anyways... It's clear, no matter what I say, that you've made up your mind. Good day.

I mean, if you’re using +\- as a barometer, then share how many of his minuses were his fault. At least that’s what I’d do. My review of the second-half goals against with Hensler on the ice easily absolved him (not counting last night, which I’m about to watch). Kehrer’s good below the dots but he’s nowhere near as effective with the puck. I liked when they were paired together (the opener against PSU IIRC). Then they pair Hensler with Knox who for now is clearly overmatched at this level.

Also, Hensler as a righty has been playing the left side a lot, and with Dexheimer no less. There was a game against Penn State where the Dexheimer-Palodichuk pairing was horrible and Hastings had to put Hensler there, presumably to clean things up.

Anyway, the burden of proof that he’s terrible defensively is on his detractors in this thread. I have pages and pages and pages (and pages) of notes covering Hensler dating back to last year and never once did he seem like a liability in his own end except for the WJC, and even then it was more risk aversion (eating pucks, rushed passes, etc) than trying to do too much or being selfish.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Patty Ice
You say that like it's a badge of honor. The other defensemen are not projected 1st round picks or former top draft picks. Most are long shots to be impact players in the AHL. Laatsch was/is the most defensively sound player on the team. Probably why they stuck Hensler next to him to start the year...

How do you explain this disparity:
View attachment 981540

Kehrer has virtually the same offensive impact and isn't bleeding goals against.

Anyways... It's clear, no matter what I say, that you've made up your mind. Good day.

Are you comparing a 5th year, NCAA senior at age 22 with an 18-year old NCAA freshman? That is a huge missing context here.
 
Anyway, the burden of proof that he’s terrible defensively is on his detractors in this thread.
I mean, you clearly just ignore it. Wander over to Wisconsin thread in the USCHO college hockey forums and see what posters (other than me) are saying.
Are you comparing a 5th year, NCAA senior at age 22 with an 18-year old NCAA freshman? That is a huge missing context here.
Kehrer is not going to play at the next level. Dude is a 3rd pairing dman on a good NCAA team. You’d think a projected 1st round pick would outperform a guy like that, regardless of age. I guess some of you just have way lower standards for how a 1st round pick should perform.
 
I mean, you clearly just ignore it. Wander over to Wisconsin thread in the USCHO college hockey forums and see what posters (other than me) are saying.

Kehrer is not going to play at the next level. Dude is a 3rd pairing dman on a good NCAA team. You’d think a projected 1st round pick would outperform a guy like that, regardless of age. I guess some of you just have way lower standards for how a 1st round pick should perform.
Outside Schaefer it’s really weak dmen group that’s why people reaching at straws for Hensler but no way he has pedigree as top 10 pick in the draft . Hes only in conversation because hes righty in a really weak dmen class . I would take Smith and Reid ahead of him .
 
Kehrer is not going to play at the next level. Dude is a 3rd pairing dman on a good NCAA team. You’d think a projected 1st round pick would outperform a guy like that, regardless of age. I guess some of you just have way lower standards for how a 1st round pick should perform.
You massively understate the impact of being a freshly 18 year old defenseman in big time college hockey compared to a soon to be 23 year old in his fifth season.

If you don't want this kid we'll take him. He's a first rounder.
 
You massively understate the impact of being a freshly 18 year old defenseman in big time college hockey compared to a soon to be 23 year old in his fifth season.

If you don't want this kid we'll take him. He's a first rounder.

For real. Sounds like the typical disgruntled fan needing a scapegoat for a disappointing season. The Badgers are a hard-working team with zero finish and Hastings needs his dmen active to compensate. All of them pinch aggressively and step up in the NZ, which often lead to chances against. There were a bunch of games Wisconsin could have sealed had they finished close-in chances but they just don’t have the personnel to do it. There’s no way actual NHL scouts are disappointed in Hensler’s season. He’s playing nearly 20 mins a night and generating more offense after a cautious start, and that’s without being on PP1.
 
Outside Schaefer it’s really weak dmen group that’s why people reaching at straws for Hensler but no way he has pedigree as top 10 pick in the draft . Hes only in conversation because hes righty in a really weak dmen class . I would take Smith and Reid ahead of him .

Smith is big and exciting but basically a fourth forward who constantly leaves his partner out to dry. There is risk there defensively. Teams loaded at forward who prioritize positional defense should have Hensler in their top 10. Reinbacher, Simashev, and Willander all went higher than they should have simply because the teams made defense the priority. Teams will be comfortable taking Hensler in the 10-15 range for obvious reasons — size, mobility, because he’s versatile and reliable in his own end. Highly doubtful he slips lower than the teens.
 
  • Like
Reactions: jtechkid
Smith has excellent 4 way mobility with 6'3 reach. I think he is not going to be an offensive defensman at the NHL level. He has a good chance, if he will be smart, to make himself into a two-way mobile D who excels at blocking entries, retrievals, moving puck out and holding OBL. With his lateral ability and stick he could be a significant piece in defensive transition. Points might never hit more than 30-40 but he could have a long career of two-way minute-eating. If he will be smart and accept that as his game instead of thinking he's Cale Makar, he will be fine.

Hensler feels more like a Derek Forbort, a long-time #5-#6 with no remarkable qualities. The size is there, he is mobile enough, he can make some easy passes and handles, he will compete but that's about it. Don't see a top 4 quality in the NHL. I would take Smith, Mrtka, Aitcheson above him without much worry.
 
You massively understate the impact of being a freshly 18 year old defenseman in big time college hockey compared to a soon to be 23 year old in his fifth season.

If you don't want this kid we'll take him. He's a first rounder.
He’s a 20-30 pick in the 1st round. He’s not this perfect player that @AlternateSideParking seems to think he is. He shouldn’t be a top 15 pick. If someone picks him there they will be disappointed. Compare him to Zeev Buium, whom went 12th last draft. Massive difference in the level of player.
 
  • Like
Reactions: jtechkid
He’s a 20-30 pick in the 1st round. He’s not this perfect player that @AlternateSideParking seems to think he is. He shouldn’t be a top 15 pick. If someone picks him there they will be disappointed. Compare him to Zeev Buium, whom went 12th last draft. Massive difference in the level of player.

You just moved the goal post from not a first round talent to "he's a 20-30 pick in the 1st round." Proof in the quote below.

Kehrer is not going to play at the next level. Dude is a 3rd pairing dman on a good NCAA team. You’d think a projected 1st round pick would outperform a guy like that, regardless of age. I guess some of you just have way lower standards for how a 1st round pick should perform.

You missed the context of the experience as well as physical development between 22 year old, 5th year senior and an 18-year old freshman. Teams aren't drafting on who the players are today. They're drafting on who they can be in the future. The 18-year old has already surpassed the 22-year old Kehrer's offensive production in all of Kehrer's five seasons in college. And the sad part is that Hensler's offense isn't his forte.

Now, you're missing the context that each draft quality is different between the draft years. The quality of players in the first round of the 2024 draft is stronger than the 2025 first round talent. The 2025 projected #1 on many mock drafts is LD Shaefer and he wouldn't be in the same atmosphere as the 2024 #1 pick in Celebrini. Using your logic, whoever picks #1 in the 2025 draft should be disappointed. Well, they should be disappointed, but are you not going to pick Shaefer or whoever you want at #1 because they are not on the same talent level as Celebrini? This is where cognitive dissonance should set in.

Due to the weaker quality of talent in this draft, as other have already previously mentioned, Hensler's stock remains around the lower half of the top-15. Hensler's size, speed, right-handedness, and quality of competition keeps his chances of being in the top-15 alive. At least, that is where many mocks and rankings have Hensler currently at this time.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Patty Ice
You just moved the goal post from not a first round talent to "he's a 20-30 pick in the 1st round." Proof in the quote below.



You missed the context of the experience as well as physical development between 22 year old, 5th year senior and an 18-year old freshman. Teams aren't drafting on who the players are today. They're drafting on who they can be in the future. The 18-year old has already surpassed the 22-year old Kehrer's offensive production in all of Kehrer's five seasons in college. And the sad part is that Hensler's offense isn't his forte.

Now, you're missing the context that each draft quality is different between the draft years. The quality of players in the first round of the 2024 draft is stronger than the 2025 first round talent. The 2025 projected #1 on many mock drafts is LD Shaefer and he wouldn't be in the same atmosphere as the 2024 #1 pick in Celebrini. Using your logic, whoever picks #1 in the 2025 draft should be disappointed. Well, they should be disappointed, but are you not going to pick Shaefer or whoever you want at #1 because they are not on the same talent level as Celebrini? This is where cognitive dissonance should set in.

Due to the weaker quality of talent in this draft, as other have already previously mentioned, Hensler's stock remains around the lower half of the top-15. Hensler's size, speed, right-handedness, and quality of competition keeps his chances of being in the top-15 alive. At least, that is where many mocks and rankings have Hensler currently at this time.
I’m not missing that the drafts have different quality or moving the goal posts calling Hensler a 20-30 pick in this draft. Put two and two together. If this was any other year Hensler wouldn’t be a projected 1st round pick. Think of how NFL teams operate. They give 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc round grades on each prospect. They do NOT have 32 1st round graded prospects for every draft. Do you have a 1st round grade on Hensler? I don’t, but I understand he will be a 1st round pick in this shitty draft

Dude, Kehrer is a mediocre college player. Most 1st round draft picks should be substantially better than him almost immediately. This isn’t hard.
 
  • Like
Reactions: jtechkid
He’s a 20-30 pick in the 1st round. He’s not this perfect player that @AlternateSideParking seems to think he is. He shouldn’t be a top 15 pick. If someone picks him there they will be disappointed. Compare him to Zeev Buium, whom went 12th last draft. Massive difference in the level of player.
great post - i think he has been slipping in every mock draft i’ve seen to 17-30 in the pick . I see him 19 - 28 in the draft which is fine . It was a quiet board until it wasn’t lol
 
Here’s a shift-by-shift of Hensler’s last game. I’ll do it in increments:

vs Notre Dame (2/23/25)

#24 Kehrer-#4 Dexheimer (righty-righty)

-@0:23 — paired with #14 Palodichuk and makes clean outlet pass from inside his own end but #13 turned it over in the NZ — then had to engage in a wall battle and made a second breakout pass for an exit and change —

-@2:00 — Hustles off bench to man right point but has to vacate to assist Palodichuk in one-on-one. Fishes puck free in front of net and escapes behind net to rim up the wall. Puck squirts back behind the net, where Hensler hustles to collect and took hard hit behind net to deliver clean breakout pass

-@4:04 — Play starts in offensive end but Irish eventually countered 3-on-3, which Hensler challenged with stick on puck at the line to help force an offside (finished his check after the whistle but refs stepped in)
 
Still Period 1

-@4:50 1-0 Notre Dame on set play against Knox-Phelan pair — Niko Jovanovic slapper right off cross-corner dump-in from Axel Kumlin — first goal of the season —

-@5:18 — Joins play in offensive zone but puck is chipped out. Palodichuk hands it off to Hensler on the backskate and fires a diagonal pass from inside his blue line to center wall where #28 Adam Pietila sweeps it in. Notre Dame then ices it.

-@5:40 - Off the draw, Notre Dame clears it off the near boards and Palodichuk takes the wrong route to the puck that allows Cole Knuble to explode down the middle for a partial break-in that forces Hensler into a hooking penalty. Hensler was a step behind Knuble who had the initial burst in what was a bang-bang play.

-Badgers kill it off and clear. Hensler heads to the defensive zone to support then exits for the change.

-@8:41 - Badgers back to PK as Weston Knox steps up and drills someone at ND blue line for interference call (Hensler doesn’t kill penalties). PP negated by Notre Dame TMM - so 4-on-4 for 34 seconds

-@10:07 - Offensive-zone draw for Palodichuk-Kehrer - then UW to the PP with Dexheimer — Hensler jumps on at 11:20 and has to defend a 1-on-1 after Finley dzone turnover. Hensler forces Janicke wide with stick on puck, then switches quickly to cover Knuble behind net and force turnover and exit. Puck is cleared and Hensler collects puck for bullet pass to streaking Fitzgerald before changing
 
Final shifts of P1

-@13:25 — Hensler joins play in offensive zone with Palodichuk but has to retreat to defend Notre Dame exit, which results in a weak dump-in for a change while Palodichuk collects and hands off to Hensler for a hard rim-redirect for Tasse that Notre Dame collects in their own end. Puck is cleared out to center, where Palodichuk bats it into the middle for a turnover, trapping Hensler into a 2-on-1 that Jovanovic whistled wide. Hensler then rubs his man off the puck to allow Palodichuk to exit. Palodichuk not doing Hensler any favors this period.

-@15:30 - Hensler joins play in offensive zone and fans on shot attempt at point, leading to Notre Dame 2-on-1 that he is able to recover into a 2-on-2 and covers the man in front. No scoring chance developed before puck was cleared. Then took a heavy hit behind net to move puck to Horbach for speedy exit and entry.

-@17:38 - Off a defensive-zone draw, Hensler pounces toward near corner to rub out Danny Nelson and jar puck loose for Palodichuk to collect and hit Finley at the half-wall for an exit. Hensler rotates off the offensive-zone cycle and takes puck directly to cage on his off-wing for a chance. Puck was eventually cleared down where Hensler delayed behind his net to fake out the forechecker and deliver clean first pass for exit

-ND to power-play as Scholl gets called for roughing in offensive zone. Janicke scores on ensuing PP as Kehrer blew coverage for an open one-timer. Backbreaker with 5.6 seconds left in P1.

Solid period for Hensler. Only mistake was because of a fanned shot and even then he recovered in good order and no scoring chance developed.
 
Period 2 with Notre Dame up 2-0 with shots 10-10

—Dexheimer/Kehrer allow near 2-on-0 break-in during opening shift. Kehrer recovers to break it up, but they allow HD chance off enduing draw.

-@1:20 — Badgers try to swap out four on the long change and it nearly costs them. Hensler covers ground quickly and takes smart route toward the far corner to finish his check. Maintained tight coverage throughout.

—@2:43 — Off defensive-zone draw, Hensler collects and exits before dumping it in, but puck doesn’t get deep. Notre Dame lobs it into middle where Hensler tried to glove it down, but it slides instead to Palodichuk for a clear. Puck goes out of play for a neutral-zone faceoff. Badgers win the draw and are able to enter to establish cycle before drawing a penalty. So Wisconsin to the PP.

-@4:01 — Hensler at left point for PP2 offensive-zone draw and delays toward middle before whipping a nice look-off pass to Tyson Dyck, whose pass back to Hensler is tipped out of the zone. Hensler collects on the backskate and hits Dyck on the tape at center ice, but entry thwarted at Notre Dame line for clear. Hensler collects behind his net and skates out for a drop pass, then helps work puck around for PP possession. Low-pct shot choice by Finley forces a Hensler keep-in, then puck is cleared to center. Hensler gracefully covers up on the backskate and delays with his head up to facilitate a change.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad