
Flyers winger Steve Downie is Public Enemy #1
after his cheap shot to the head of Senators winger Dean McAmmond. While many of you might be immune to the violence that seems typical of today's NHL, there has still been much public outcry over concussions, head shots, and the fact that the NHL has done little to stem to tide of such aggression.
One bright spot in this story
is that Downie took the time to phone McAmmond to apologize, and McAmmond accepted. Some players don't even bother with such a step. It shows a little class, at least, that Downie recognizes that he really hurt someone in a bad way.
"I just said thanks for the call and I'm going to choose to believe that he is sincere about it," said McAmmond in front of Ottawa reporters on Thursday morning.
Don't think, however, that this means McAmmond doesn't want Downie to feel the wrath of a long suspension. While Dean's words were chosen carefully, Sens coach John Paddock wasn't holding back about what he feels should happen to Downie.
Ottawa head coach John Paddock was even more direct about his demands for a suspension against Downie - a player with a reputation for playing on the edge at the junior level.
"For the good of Steve Downie, he needs to be suspended for a long time," said Paddock. "For him to be in the NHL when he's 24, the best thing for the league to do is to take it away from him for a while. We all know his history in the OHL. Hockey is the most important thing to him. So take it away from him."
For those who don't know, Steve Downie was involved with
a rather disgusting hazing incident, known as "The Hot Box", during his junior hockey days. Along with racial slurs and cheap hits, Downie is the type of bad-boy Sean Avery-type of player that personifies the ugly side of hockey, yet earns him praise within the old-school hockey crowd because of his "grit and toughness".
The NHL has missed many opportunities to send the right message, and should not waste this one like they have so many others. A 5-game or 10-game suspension just won't be enough to show players that the NHL is serious about cracking down on career-threatening cheap shots.
So what if Downie is likely go to the AHL? Force the AHL to honor the suspension, and make it
at least 30 games. Depriving Downie of professional hockey until at least Christmas is, perhaps, the only way he'll ever get the message to smarten up. Do you really think he's going to be all that sad about a 2-week vacation? No, but give him a few months away from the sport he loves, WITHOUT PAY, and maybe he'll start to feel bad about the situation he put himself into.
It would also help if the Flyers, an organization notorious for dirty hockey, would not back up 'their kid' so much and let him know that this type of hit is not tolerable. There is a fine line between hard-hitting hockey and cheap shots, and Downie crossed it by a country mile.