Tue 22 Apr 2008
Can you imagine what it would be like if Montreal won the Cup?
Posted by Gary Harding under Islanders 07-08This article came from the Canadian Press this morning. I know that Canadiens are passionate about their hockey, but it seems that their passion is a bit too much. Check this out:

MONTREAL - The burnt-out shells of at least five Montreal police cars littered the city’s downtown early Tuesday morning after vandals torched and smashed vehicles and damaged businesses to punctuate a first-round NHL playoff victory celebration.
A massive crowd celebrating the Canadiens seventh-game victory Monday over the Boston Bruins filled downtown streets Monday and had started to disperse just before midnight when smaller pockets started the violence. There were no initial reports of injuries.
Jean-Francois Hotte said the incident degenerated quickly as police started chasing people.
“One minute we were all hanging out and celebrating and then all hell broke out,” Hotte said.
Hotte said he watched as a Foot Locker store was ransacked by looters. A liquor store was also hit.
“It didn’t take five minutes before everyone was up on Ste-Catherine Street. It went really fast.”
While the initial celebration was relatively peaceful, small groups milled around on several street corners even as riot police surrounded burning vehicles to allow firefighters to douse flames.
Television helicopter footage showed one instance where a pair of vandals on a darkened street set ablaze the interior of a damaged, abandoned police car while a third person recorded the act with his cellular telephone. A handful of others stood by watching.
Police spokeswoman Const. Anie Lemieux could not confirm the number of arrests but several men were taken away in handcuffs, including some wearing Canadiens jerseys who pounded a car with cement blocks. Several stores were also damaged.
“Police officers are still on the scene trying to control these people,” Lemieux said just after midnight in Montreal.
“Fortunately no one seems to have been injured so far. Police have had things thrown at them, bystanders too.”
Lemieux said it would be impossible to tell the extent of the damage until the downtown area calmed down.
Ava Ball was advised by police to keep her car underground as the tension continued to escalate.
“I had to take my car back into the underground because police advised me they’d trash my car,” Ball said.
“I had to go back and wait it out to go home,” she added, as she debated whether it was safe to leave as the situation appeared to calm down around 1:30 a.m.
Police were on edge as they patrolled in helmets and with batons.
“It’s not how you’d want the night to end,” Ball said.
“I think we’re all a bit sad about the result of the evening considering we had such a tremendous win.”
Montreal recently had a spate of so-called anarchist violence, including the torching of six police cars in a station parking lot in March.
Earlier in the evening, moments after the Canadiens won the seven-game series, thousands of Montrealers descended on the city’s downtown core to whoop it up and soak in the Canadiens series win over the Boston Bruins.
A large contingent of Montreal police was waiting for the raucous crowd including the police riot squad. The bulk of the crowd was clearing out when the trouble started.
Fans who held vigil outside the Bell Centre earlier on Monday night were jubilant, erupting into cheers for every good play by their heroes inside.
“A great game, well played, total control,” said Sebastien Boulet. “I’ve got a really good feeling about this team”.
Arjun Aravinthan and hundreds of others broke into a spontaneous “25″ chant. The Canadiens have won 24 Stanley Cups in their history.
“We’re gonna get it this year, this is our year,” said Aravinthan, who claims to be a Habs fan since exiting his mother’s womb.
“We believe.”
Interesting, eh?
Well - Game 7’s tonight - I think Washington will pull it off, as will San Jose.
April 22nd, 2008 at 10:29 am
Thats what I initially thought, but hopefully the police will take an approach similar to Edmonton and completely drop the hammer on any kind of activity like this.
April 22nd, 2008 at 4:48 pm
Done I’d expect something like that in the states. I agree though. Something needs to be done before it gets out of hand. It doesn’t reflect well on the sport, let alone, general civilized behavior.
April 23rd, 2008 at 11:28 am
Unfortunately, it was a group of thugs who had nothing to do with hockey fans involved in this. After the game, there was huge, peaceful celebration in downtown. When that was beginning to die down, the losers sensed an opportunity and seized on it.
Funny thing, there were tons of police out there, but they didn’t sense anything like this after Round 1. You can be absolutely certain things will be different after the Habs put away Philadelphia, especially if it’s after a Bell Centre game.
Another positive is that there were a lot of people with video and/or photos of the incident. There have been a lot of those people who turned that info over to police and maybe, just maybe, some of them will be caught. The city is really upset about this and so are the Habs - they put out a public statement yesterday, even though the team and its fans had nothing to do with it.
Montreal-hating fans and media are having a field day trying to do a hatchet job here, but it won’t work. It is, as it always has been and always will be, the epicentre of the sport. The connection between that team and its fans is unrivalled by any other team on this continent.
It won’t take 7 for them to dispose of a vastly inferior Philadelphia team. They learned their lesson in Round 1 by finally waking up and destroying Boston in Game 7. It should have been done three games earlier.