In the two games Dach played against the top line for a combined 7:18 while Suzuki played against the top line for a combined 4:41. So there's no contradiction, yes it's a small sample size so I'm not going to make any sweeping statements but so far the only evidence presented shows that you are wrong. If you'd like to go through more games to provide evidence that you aren't wrong feel free. But as of right now the evidence says you are wrong.
Why are you combining games? That's outrageously disingenuous. Each game is its own game. You can't just pick and choose games to your liking. So if you consider Larkin/Raymond as the toughest matchups (which would be appropriate), Dach played against them for 1 minute and 1 second in one game while Suzuki/CC had 5 minutes and 21 seconds. In the other game, it was 25 seconds for Suzuki/CC and 4 minutes and 23 seconds for Dach.
So even with your disingenuous way of combining games, Suzuki/CC played 5 minutes and 46 seconds against them while Dach had 5 minutes and 24 seconds. You are still wrong here.
You can't say I'm wrong when you admit it's not an appropriate sample size. In fact, you are also wrong here because the Columbus game shows that Suzuki/CC in fact played more against their top line (which you said otherwise making you dead wrong). I mentioned this in my previous post and you failed to acknowledge it. It's probably because you are the wrong one but can't admit it. Hell, even in that Columbus game, not only did Suzuki/CC face Monahan's line more than Dach did, but they also faced Sillinger's line for over 6 minutes in addition to the Monahan matchup.
You're proving my point for me. Take the L and move on. If you want to make the argument that Suzuki/CC don't face the toughest competition every single game then yes you made that point in the isolated Detroit game from the 3 game sample sizes you're using. But you're contradicting yourself all over the place and are incorrectly calling me wrong.