1) You look at the video and tell me where the "danger" was to Buch. Shot to the shoulder from a guy wearing a glove. Cheap? yes. Dangerous? No.
2) The dangerous play was the Panarin takedown. But frankly, considering panarin jumped on Wilson's back as Wilson was already engaged by Strome, Panarin brought that on. If I jump on Bob Probert's back while he's scrumming with someone, that's my decision. If all I get is taken down, like Panarin did, I count myself lucky.
3) I keep revisiting the idea of "horrific acts of violence" because that's the nonsensical, hysterical language used by the f***ing New York Rangers. The kind of language that real hockey people (John Davidson) distance themselves from. The kind of hyperbole that exists in almost every conversation about the incident.
4) Popular messaging doesn't make it right. It usually indicates willingness for people to let others do thinking for them.
That kind of hyperbole is existing in this conversation because you keep using it.
And watch the video, the whole thing is dangerous and cheap. Wilson's interaction with Buchnevich was dangerous and cheap, his interaction with Panarin was dangerous and cheap. Because nothing came of it you want to draw the conclusion that it couldn't be dangerous instead that it was just chance that nothing came of it.