Blind Gardien
nexus of the crisis
My only question is how anybody thinks they can state definitively whether much contact was made or not. It looked upon careful review (from the extremely crappy camera angle) like it was a glancing blow to the side of the head... which is actually probably not as bad as the initial live action made it seem (because the speed of Johnson's cutback and his violent elbowing motion, and Downie's collapse certainly combined to make it initially seem quite brutal).Bruwinz37 said:GKJ, I dont disagree with that. But I do maintain my stance that Downie embellished the whole thing and Johnson didnt make much contact. That was my only point here. No one is trying to defend Johnson.
But even having formed that general opinion, I wouldn't go on to tell anybody that I've definitely got it right. We just don't have enough to go on, really. And by extension, we similarly can have no clue about whether or not Downie was embellishing or not. Just because it is in his character to do so doesn't mean that he did it in this case. It's another unknown.
So if you take the stance that we don't really know the finer details of what happened, most of the posters here are judging on the "intent", which seems to be the most clear thing we can see.
I tend to be in agreement with Bruwinz37 that what Johnson did was pretty classless and wrong. And in a vacuum, in a hockey world of my own personal preference, a glancing blow with no real injury sustained, even if the attempt to injure was made as classlessly as it was, is no cause for suspension.
However, stepping out of that vacuum into what has typically been an ultra-conservative IIHF approach with respect to acts of violence, I'm a little surprised that they weren't more severe. Pleased, because I want to see more of Johnson, who is one of the best players in the tournament, but a little bit surprised.