The Province

THIS DOESN’T FLY

Senators ban Ottawa reporters from charter flights in response to Uber-gate, but if this dysfunctio­nal team wants to blame someone for being ‘in the dumpster,’ it should take a good, hard look in the mirror

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS mtraikos@postmedia.com

There are 31 teams in the National Hockey League.

All of them fly charter for road trips.

But for the past several years, only one of them has allowed reporters to travel together with the team.

That is, until now.

Days after the Ottawa Citizen and Ottawa Sun published a leaked video that showed a vanload of Ottawa players talking crap about an assistant coach during an Uber ride in Arizona, the Senators informed veteran hockey reporter Ken Warren that the Sun and Citizen would no longer be allowed to travel with the team.

Warren was literally standing at the airport gate when he was kicked off the flight on Friday, and though he got on a later commercial flight, he ended up missing that day’s practice in Tampa Bay.

The Senators did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. But the last-minute notice indicates that this was their way of hitting back at the Ottawa Citizen/Ottawa Sun for publishing an Uber video that the Senators had hoped would never see the light of day.

Either way, it was a juvenile move. And, frankly, it was not at all surprising coming from an owner who has operated the team with a sort of Trumpian approach to controllin­g the message.

Also on the Senators’ growing no-fly list is TSN reporter Brent Wallace who, prior to the team’s alumni Parliament Hill game last December, had the audacity to ask owner Eugene Melnyk about a report that suggested he had been withholdin­g bonus money from his employees.

Melnyk denied the allegation.

Once the cameras were turned off, bystanders saw him turn to Wallace and say, “I’m going to bury you.”

Since then, Wallace’s seat on the charter has also been revoked, leaving Sylvain St-Laurent of French-language newspaper Le Droit with one of the remaining few seats. Well, until he writes something that Melnyk doesn’t like.

Based on the owner’s thin skin and the team’s propensity for causing controvers­y, that shouldn’t be too long.

This isn’t about saving money or making travel easier for the Ottawa Sun and Ottawa Citizen. With or without a seat on the charter, this newspaper is going to continue to travel to NHL games and do its job.

Rather, it’s about a franchise that believes it can shape the news with bullying tactics straight out of a five-year-old’s playbook.

“We remain committed to covering the stories, both the good and the bad, surroundin­g the Ottawa Senators — coverage that our readers and their fans expect from us,” said Michelle Richardson, editor-in-chief of the Ottawa Sun and Ottawa Citizen. “We will be at (Saturday) night’s game in Tampa providing our usual game coverage and analysis.”

The news is not always positive, especially when it concerns a hockey team that is near the bottom of the standings as well as in average attendance. It doesn’t help that, off the ice, the Senators have spent the past year or so embroiled in one controvers­y after another, with the owner having started most of the fires or, at the very least, trying to smother them in gasolineso­aked rags.

Shortly after the end of last season, Melnyk invited reporters to a town-hall meeting with season-ticket holders. Cameras and questions were not allowed.

Months later, after the Senators traded away two of their best players, Melnyk was so desperate for positive PR that he staged a one-on-one interview with defenceman Mark Borowiecki in which Melnyk fielded softball questions on the rebuild and his commitment to keeping the team in Ottawa.

“Some people are talking in town, ‘He may move the team!’ Let me tell you something,” Melnyk said in the video interview with Borowiecki. “First things first, is I’m going to stick around for a long, long time. OK? I’m not going anywhere. And No. 2, the franchise is not going anywhere. That’s totally solid. So everyone can focus, get rid of the noise.”

The thing that Melnyk doesn’t seem to understand is that it’s not the media making the noise. They’re just the ones filing the complaint.

It wasn’t the Ottawa Citizen/ Sun that chased away franchise icon Daniel Alfredsson from a front-office job. We didn’t trade Erik Karlsson and Mike Hoffman for a bunch of magic beans after the two became embroiled in a cyber-bullying scandal. Who was it that threatened to move the team if attendance didn’t pick up? Whose employee was accused of sexually harassing a shuttlebus driver at the draft? Who failed to lottery-protect a firstround draft pick in a regrettabl­e trade for Matt Duchene that was only made because ownership didn’t want to pay Kyle Turris his market value?

It certainly wasn’t Ken Warren.

The Ottawa Citizen and Ottawa Sun didn’t install a hidden camera in an Uber to catch the private conversati­on of the team’s players. For that matter, the Ottawa Citizen/ Ottawa Sun didn’t pay for the video. The driver tweeted out and posted it to YouTube for everyone to see. By the time the Senators told the newspaper to take the video down, the cat was out of the bag. Everyone had it and everyone was running with it.

But rather than focus its energy on why these controvers­ies keep popping up, the organizati­on seems more concerned with trying to prevent them from being reported. Of course, that would take a measure of accountabi­lity, which is something that the franchise is in short supply of.

The Senators don’t seem to understand that the easiest way to dissolve a problem is by facing it head-on. Instead, it keeps fanning the flames and breathing new life into it.

When the Uber video (which, to be honest, wasn’t all that bad — imagine if cameras were rolling when the subject of the owner came up) was released, the team’s response was to trot out four players who weren’t even in the van to talk about it.

Where was Melnyk? Where was GM Pierre Dorion? Where was Matt Duchene, Chris Wideman or any of the players who not only bragged to a stranger that they were NHL players, but then proceeded to trash their team and their coach in front of that stranger?

All of a sudden, a one-day story became a two-day story that might become a seasonlong story if an extended version of the video were to get released. Of course, who knows what other controvers­y will have popped up by then.

As Melnyk said in that video interview with Borowiecki back in September: “Right now, we’re kind of in the dumpster.”

Truer words were never spoken.

 ?? — POSTMEDIA FILES ?? Eugene Melnyk’s Senators banned reporters from the Ottawa Citizen and Sun from their charter flights after the papers reported on players criticizin­g an assistant coach in a video leaked online (inset).
— POSTMEDIA FILES Eugene Melnyk’s Senators banned reporters from the Ottawa Citizen and Sun from their charter flights after the papers reported on players criticizin­g an assistant coach in a video leaked online (inset).
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