Truro News

Ottawa warms up to Senators playoff run

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John Couse’s bar is quiet on a weekday afternoon as he looks ahead to the weekend.

Game 1 of the NHL’s Eastern Conference matchup is tonight, with the Ottawa Senators just four wins away from the Stanley Cup final.

The path through the playoffs has been anything but smooth off the ice. Turnout at his pub – the Lieutenant’s Pump, on a strip the city has dubbed “Sens Mile” – was smaller than expected for the first three playoff games, Couse said.

The team’s first-round series against the Boston Bruins saw empty seats at the first home game, which prompted questions about the city’s relationsh­ip with its hockey team.

“It really didn’t feel like we normally do for playoff hockey,” Couse says 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.”

So, too, is the prime minister. Justin Trudeau said Friday he plans to temporaril­y set aside his allegiance to his beloved Montreal Canadiens to back the Senators, and urged 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 during a news conference in Brampton, Ont.

The Senators, who face the Pittsburgh Penguins starting today, were left standing alone after the Edmonton Oilers suffered a narrow Game 7 loss earlier this week to the Anaheim Ducks.

“We’re all happy to support The Ottawa Senators open their Eastern Conference final series tonight in Pittsburgh.

Ottawa right now,” Trudeau said. “Even Torontonia­ns and Montrealer­s can agree on this particular one.”

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

Leafs and Habs fans on Twitter were just some of those who treated the comments as an affront to their collective dignity.

“Fake news,” tweeted one. “This is prepostero­us,” said another.

Added a third: “I’ll cheer when the Senators start golfing.”

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

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

It’s just not the mentality of the capital, says Eric MacIntosh, an associate professor in the school of human kinetics at the University of Ottawa,

whose research behaviour.

The fans here are simply more subdued, and excitement for the team has been slow to build, MacIntosh said.

After the Senators ousted the New York Rangers, fans danced in the middle of Sens Mile; some gathered at the airport in the middle of the night to welcome the team home.

“You see the clip of the fans dancing in the street when the light is green. In Ottawa, we’re so nice when the light gets red, we (usually) get out of the way,” Senators general manager Pierre Dorion said.

The Senators have been a part of the city since 1992, inserting themselves into a region previously divided primarily between Toronto and Montreal fans. The Senators have neither the history that the Maple Leafs have with the city of Toronto, nor cultural connection­s like the Canadiens, who are woven into the fabric of French Canadian society.

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AP PHOTO

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