Montreal Gazette

Game’s anthem in English only sparks criticism

Canadiens were the ‘road team,’ NHL says

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL • The National Hockey League says it presented an English-only version of the Canadian national anthem on Saturday night because the Montreal Canadiens were considered the road team in their opening game of the league’s restart against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Toronto.

The decision to use an English-only version of O Canada drew the ire of some on social media, including former Montreal mayor and federal politician Denis Coderre, who blasted the league for the lack of French on Twitter.

O Canada was performed by Canadian crooner Michael Bublé while an instrument­al version of the Star Spangled Banner was played at Scotiabank Arena ahead of Game 1 of the best-of-five series between Pittsburgh and Montreal.

The anthem by Bublé, a Grammy Award-winning singer, was recorded at an empty Rogers Arena in Vancouver. It was also used before the Edmonton Oilers-chicago Blackhawks game at Rogers Place in Edmonton, the other NHL hub city, earlier Saturday.

A spokesman for the NHL said in an email an English version of the anthem was used because Montreal was technicall­y the road team for its opening games against Pittsburgh.

“Game 1 and 2 of the series are “road“games for Montreal,” wrote Gary Meagher. “When they are the home team (Games 3 and 4) — the game presentati­on and hockey operations will include a number of the elements of a game at the Bell Centre.”

A senior spokespers­on for the Canadiens organizati­on said ultimately those kinds of decisions in the bubble fall to the league.

But Paul Wilson, the club’s vice-president of public affairs and communicat­ions, told The Canadian Press that team owner Geoff Molson noticed the lack of French during the anthem, asking Wilson to inquire about why it was the case in a text message.

Some social media users piled on when they realized the lack of French in the anthem — especially given the Canadiens were playing.

The always outspoken Coderre, an ardent Habs fan, also brushed off a fellow Twitter user’s suggestion it was a Pittsburgh home game.

Coderre said he’d heard a bilingual Canadian anthem performed at a game played in Pittsburgh previously.

 ?? ANDRE RINGUETTE / FREESTYLE PHOTO / GETTY IMAGES ?? Canadiens Brendan Gallagher, Carey Price and Ben Chiarot stand as the national anthem is played before Saturday’s game against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Toronto.
ANDRE RINGUETTE / FREESTYLE PHOTO / GETTY IMAGES Canadiens Brendan Gallagher, Carey Price and Ben Chiarot stand as the national anthem is played before Saturday’s game against the Pittsburgh Penguins in Toronto.

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