Toronto Star

Raptors’ run fuels Montreal’s own hoop dreams

‘Jurassic Peel’ shows sport’s rising popularity in hockey hotbed

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

Montreal shut down two downtown blocks Thursday night to allow people to cheer on a team from the city’s traditiona­l bête noire: Toronto.

The very notion would have seemed far-fetched, until Monday night.

That’s when several thousand enthusiast­ic fans turned up for the impromptu “Jurassic Park” on Peel St. to cheer on the Raptors in what would be a losing effort against the Golden State Warriors.

“We were all Canadian that night and it was very emotional,” said Alain Creton, head of the Peel Street Merchants’ Associatio­n and owner of Chez Alexandre, a popular Parisienne brasserie.

Creton said he was astounded by the number of young people from all background­s who were crammed up against his terrace that night.

On Wednesday, Mayor Valérie Plante announced the city would do it again Thursday — this time on both Peel and Crescent Sts. — as the Raptors attempted to eliminate the Warriors in California and capture their first NBA championsh­ip.

For one of the key figures championin­g an expansion NBA franchise for Montreal, the gatherings — and the Raptors’ exhilarati­ng run — have only served to help his own long-term goal.

“It certainly validates our findings that basketball is indeed very popular in Montreal,” former senator Michael Fortier said this week.

“This run … has demonstrat­ed to people that don’t live in Canada that our interest in basketball isn’t just concentrat­ed in the GTA.”

Fortier was at Scotiabank Arena for Monday’s tilt, but saw video of the massive Montreal gathering, estimated in the thousands.

“When I saw the video, I didn’t initially believe it, because it looked like Jurassic Park (in Toronto),” Fortier said. “But I’m not surprised. You go to bars, you go into restaurant­s, public places where there are TV sets and when game time comes, people are all watching it.

“I don’t think it’s just a fad — I think there’s a keen interest in basketball.”

The decision to create a Montreal Jurassic Park — dubbed “Jurassic Peel” in the local parlance — came at the last minute. The block was already closed because of Canadian Grand Prix festivitie­s and the promoter suggested they keep it shut for the Raptors game.

“We decided it late on Sunday night and we only had part of the day Monday (to promote it), we didn’t even tell the media, we just put it on Facebook,” Creton said. Among those on hand Monday night was Canadian singer and Raptors fan Karl Wolf, who has felt the Montreal-Toronto rivalry on both ends of the spectrum having lived in both towns.

He wasn’t surprised to find Montrealer­s rallying behind the only Canadian NBA team.

“Toronto and Montreal are the two coolest Canadian cities, they’re like cousins, and I can say that I’m from both,” said Wolf, who studied film at Concordia University.

Bruno Delorme, a sports marketing lecturer at Concordia and McGill universiti­es, said such a turnout is a good indicator for Montreal’s own hoops dreams.

“Perhaps not in the short, short term but in the mediumto long-term, it means a lot,” Delorme said. “It says a lot for the future of basketball — there was already a fan base before and the interest is growing.”

Last October, a group of Quebec businesspe­ople revealed they want to bring an NBA franchise to Montreal — without using public funds.

They made the declaratio­n despite expansion not being on the table for now for the 30team league.

“We’re fine with that; we are confident that they will get there, but they hold all of the cards,” Fortier said. “We want to be ready as a city to respond to an expansion proposal.”

Fortier said the plan — preparing a financial package and talking to potential Canadian and foreign investors — continues in earnest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada