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Seidenberg is a clean player with no reputation for what happened.
I think this doesn't matter at all though. To me this sort of invalidates what you're saying in that if it would have been a dirty player that made the hit then we could discuss it. That's how I read your reaction. We're being homers because it was a bad hit from a good player. You are saying we're reacting to the type of hit, and you seem to reacting to the type of player who gave the hit. I'm just looking at it from a pure danger standpoint and the fact to me is that this sort of thing is becoming more prevalent and whether or not he should be punished is ancillary to the point that each year more and more of these boarding injuries are happening and the NHL only seems to care if 1.) It impacts a star player and thus revenue or 2.) if it would require a star player to receive a suspension. The fact that it seems to be happening more doesn't seem to be making into the new saftey rules headlines. Especially when disciplinary actions are so wildly different and can be dependent on the history of a player. Which to me is wrong. Sure I get the punish the repeat offender more theory, but at the same time who is giving the hit doesn't actually make it better or worse.