Montreal Gazette

Trudeau backing Senators, but not all of us are

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA Politics, like hockey, has its unwritten rules — and on Friday, Justin Trudeau broke one of them, daring to suggest the country should jump on the bandwagon of the only Canadian team left in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The Ottawa Senators, who will face the Pittsburgh Penguins beginning Saturday to decide the top team in the Eastern Conference, were left standing alone after the Edmonton Oilers suffered a narrow Game 7 loss earlier this week to the Anaheim Ducks.

The prime minister will temporaril­y set aside his allegiance to his beloved Montreal Canadiens to back the Senators, and is urging fellow hockey fans to join him.

“I think all Canadians will be rooting for the final Canadian team in the Stanley Cup playoffs,” Trudeau said in Brampton, Ont.

“We’re all happy to support Ottawa right now. Even Torontonia­ns and Montrealer­s can agree on this particular one.”

Or not, if the reaction on social media is any indication.

“This should be grounds to trigger an election,” one tweeted. Another wrote: “I’ll cheer when the Senators start golfing.”

Muted enthusiasm for the Senators is fitting, perhaps, considerin­g Ottawa’s reputation as a place jokingly derided by detractors as “the city that fun forgot.”

The city seems underwhelm­ed by the strongest Senators playoff run in a decade — at least compared with the rabid enthusiasm that tends to accompany hockey success in Canada’s betterknow­n markets.

Turnout at John Couse’s pub — the Lieutenant’s Pump, on a strip the city has dubbed “Sens Mile” — was smaller than expected for the first three playoff games. And the team’s firstround series against the Boston Bruins was marked by empty seats at home, prompting questions about the city’s relationsh­ip with its hockey team.

That, Couse said, is all about to change. “It really didn’t feel like we normally do for playoff hockey,” he said of the early games. “Now that we’re in the thick of it and the Sens have proven that they are a legitimate playoff team, I think everyone is paying attention.”

Few in this city expect to see fans getting rowdy or sporting face paint like Oakland Raiders fans.

It’s just not the mentality of the capital, said Eric MacIntosh, an associate professor in the school of human kinetics at the University of Ottawa, whose research includes fan behaviour. Fans here are more subdued and excitement for the team has been slow to build, he suggested.

“I would put Ottawa’s fan base up against any one of those cities (Toronto and Montreal), any day of the week in terms of knowledge of the game and interest in the game,” MacIntosh said. “It’s just that I think some cities have more of those (avid) fans than Ottawa.”

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