Evra's evidence made sense, was consistent and fitted with the video evidence that was produced later. Suarez's didn't.
The only issues I have with the hearing is the fact that they repeatedly make the assessment that Suarez fouled Evra in the first place. IMO he was attempting to dribble past Evra, Evra tackled him and the ball was clearly going out of play, in the process of Evra tackling Suarez there was probably impact between the two players and that's why Evra went to ground holding his knee. There was no foul, it was simply a case of two players fighting for possession in a tight space and a coming together. There was no kicking of the knee by Suarez.
Another point is that in the initial arguments over what took place it wasn't mentioned that Evra started the confrontation with an aggressive comment with literally translated as "sister's cooch" but was quickly downplayed to an equivalent of "effing hell". That only emerged with the evidence of the experts in linguistics. It wasn't mentioned earlier than that and that was strange.
In a way I do have sympathy for Suarez in that Evra started the aggressive confrontation and he simply responded in kind. But the repeated racial comments and his later denial really screwed Suarez. For that it seems correct that he got done for 8 matches, however harsh that seems at first.
One thing that is encouraging is that fact that Evra was so surprised at Suarez's insults and insists that he has never suffered abuse like this in his career. That's a pleasant surprise to me and I think fantastic evidence that the campain to eradicate racism from football has largely worked.
I think Suarez should just take the ban, accept what he did was wrong, apologise for the incident and just move on. I do think his 8 match ban is punishment enough and it shouldn't be a cloud hanging over him for the rest of his career, but I doubt this will be the case.