When NHL Fans (and Media) Cross the Line

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Written by Habsterix, AllHabs.net

We live in a society where it is frowned upon to discipline children, a world where more than half the marriages are guaranteed to turn into divorces and where single parenting is a norm, not an exception. In a generation where children have the upper hand on parents and teachers, creating a feeling of invincibility and entitlement, it should come as no surprise that sports fans feel like it is their right to do whatever they want to their team and /or to the players, under the conceited excuse that they are paying to watch them. But have we ever stopped to think about the effects some of their actions can have on the team that they, as self-proclaimed fans, cheer for?

PENTICTON, BC. — Such situations came to light a couple of times this season in Montreal. After head coach Jacques Martin was shown the door and Canadiens’ management replaced him on an interim basis by Randy Cunneyworth, a small group who call themselves “Habs’ fans” raised a fuss over the fact that he doesn’t speak French. This had the effect that players in the dressing room and around the NHL took note, forcing some of them to speak out on the topic, being careful with their choice of words. But rest assured that the impact has been felt well beyond Montreal and NHL players have taken notes… in a negative way.

I was thinking that it would be cool to play in Montreal”, a player told me off-record. “But there is no way I’ll even want to sign there now. It’s pure non-sense, and we talked about it on our team.”

Not satisfied with the damage done by those so-called fans, another group (or was it the same one?) launched a campaign to ridicule Scott Gomez by celebrating his “goals-slump anniversary.” Really, it’s like saying that it’s okay to tell someone to F-off as long as you have a smile on your face! Luckily, this last filth campaign saw an overwhelming number of true fans not only refusing to jump on the bandwagon, but ridiculing the smear work by those imbeciles. Fans at the game cheered Gomez instead, trying to help him out of that slump, a situation that reminded yours truly of when fans were booing young star Carey Price a couple of years ago.

But what’s truly hurtful in those events is the fact that the traditional media covering the team has, in both cases, covered those issues instead of letting them die, therefore bringing more exposure to something that doesn’t deserve any. I wonder how Geoff Molson felt when he saw an article on RDS.ca publicizing the Facebook group being formed to “celebrate” Gomez’ anniversary? I’d be curious to ask him “off the record.”

Fans will be fans. They will be critical of the team, they will have their favourite players and they will find some scape goats, players, coaches that they don’t like, and that’s perfectly normal. Go on fan forums and denounce the lack of production of your least favourite players, share your thoughts with friends and foes about what the team should or should not do with them, vent to radio personalities at night if you must. But if you’re a true fan of your team and want them to improve, you owe it to them and to yourself to draw a line which you should never cross. Booing individual players on home ice every time they touch the puck, starting or participating in smear campaigns in a public display against one or a few of them, or to raise political issues when the team has said all along that a move was temporary, all of that plays against your team in the long run. If or when a marquee player signs elsewhere, those so-called fans will be the first ones to complain that management should have matched the offer. Perhaps they did folks, but the player(s) chose to go elsewhere.

In conclusion, it can be summarized in one word: THINK! Look further than your own nose. Take a step back to recognize the forest from the trees.

Bob Gainey said it best in September 2003 when “fans” were booing Patrice Brisebois: “We don’t need those people, we don’t want those people, they’re jealous people, yellow people. I think they’re a bunch of gutless bastards, to be honest. Our message to them is to stay away. We don’t need you.”

En français: Quand les partisans vont trop loin

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J.D. Lagrange
J.D. is a Senior writer for All Habs as well as Associate-Editor for the French version Le Magazine All Habs, while one of three Administrators of the fan forum Les Fantômes du Forum. He has created the handle Habsterix as a fictional character for the sole purpose of the internet. It is based on the cartoon Asterix of Gaule and his magic potion is his passion for the Montreal Canadiens. How old is he? His close friends will tell you that he’s so old, his back goes out more than he does! He was born when Béliveau lifted the Cup and remembers the days when seeing the Habs winning was not a wish, it was an expectation. For him, writing is a hobby, not a profession. Having moved to beautiful British Columbia in 1992 from his home town of Sherbrooke, Quebec, he started writing mostly in French to keep up his grammar, until non-bilingual BC friends pushed him into starting his own English Blog. His wife will say that he can be stubborn, but she will be the first to recognise that he has great sense of humour. He is always happy to share with you readers his point of views on different topics, and while it is expected that people won’t always agree, respect of opinions and of others is his mission statement. || J.D. est Rédacteur-Adjoint sur Le Magazine All Habs et il est un Rédacteur Principal sur le site anglophone All Habs, tout en étant un des trois Administrateurs du forum de discussion Les Fantômes du Forum. Il a créé le pseudonyme Habstérix comme caractère fictif pour l’internet. Celui-ci est basé sur Astérix de Gaule et sa potion magique est sa passion pour les Canadiens de Montréal. Lorsqu’il est né, Jean Béliveau soulevait la Coupe Stanley et il se rappelle des jours où gagner n’était pas un espoir, mais une attente. Pour lui, écrire est un passe-temps, pas une profession. Ayant déménagé dans la superbe Colombie-Britannique en 1992 en provenance de sa ville natale de Sherbrooke, Québec, il a commencé à écrire en français pour garder sa grammaire, jusqu’à ce que ses amis anglophones ne réussissent à le convaincre d’avoir son blog en anglais. Son épouse vous dira qu’il est têtu, mais elle sera la première à reconnaître son grand sens de l’humour. Il est toujours fier de partager avec vous, lecteurs et lectrices, ses points de vue sur différents sujets, et quoi que les gens ne s’entendent pas toujours sur ceux-ci, le respect des opinions et des autres est son énoncé de mission.

8 COMMENTS

  1. You criticized the media for publicizing the ridiculous events surrounding some Habs fans. You do realize you just did the same, no?

    • Casey, in all due respect, you might have missed the point. It is not to criticize, but rather an attempt to show the negative impact it can have on the team’s ability to sign players in the future. There is nothing in this article criticizing the team, as much as shining some light on what NHL players are seeing from the outside.

  2. People have no balance in their lives these days. I blame it on the media, movies, and games. All three venues are not connected to the real world. Instead, all three are concerned only with the dark, dreary, and violent side of existence. So people whose lives are centered around these things take them into sports. They imitate what they see and hear. Nothing will change until we want it to change. “Change Your Mind, Change Your Life” is a great book to start one on the journey to a balanced life in which sports is a game instead of an obsession.

  3. While I’ve become kind of accustomed to the treatment l’AntiCHambre reserves to its ‘whipping boys’ of the day — when it’s not Scott Gomez, it’s AK46 — I was disgusted with Guy Carbonneau’s urging Québec fans to boo Gomez last weekend. He must have been one of the few NHLers to have made that kind of statement, at least to my knowledge. While I understand Patrice Brisebois is a close friend, this kind of humiliation knows no nationality. I’ve lost all respect for the man and I hope this will prevent him from ever getting back to coaching in the NHL (unless he did apologize and I have missed it, and even then… ).

    Also, to Luc Gélinas from same TV outlet: “Réflexion du vendredi matin: ça fait quand même plus d’un an que Scott Gomez n’a pas marqué un but au Centre Bell.” Can’t you leave the man alone, please?

    While we complain about the homerism of medias covering other teams (that Jack Edwards fella, for instance), it’s a shame that our own media does that. While I’m not expecting them to cheer for our favorite team, cheer-leading the haters is simply unacceptable in my book. Because, it is what the Bergies of this world do on l’AntiCHambre. Now, Carbo too.

    • I am always very cautious about the possibility of translation issues changing context (see l’affaire Cammy) but I was astonished to hear that Carbo had said what he apparently said about booing Gomez. This is a guy who coached the Habs and whose name still floats up as a possible once again coach. Just disgraceful.

      In my 40 years of watching the Habs I have seen many times when the home crowd booed the team. It was always as a collective response to a lackluster team effort from a sophisticated group who understood the game and wanted to demonstrtae they expected better. It was situational. Come the first period of the next game they would be cheering wildly. It was not personal. It was not cheap. It was an expression of “we know you can do better.”

      I was appalled at the deal that brought Gomez and his contract to Montreal. From the beginning I thought Jacques Martin was the wrong coach for this team. But the absolute venom that has been spewed at these men among others is shameful.

  4. I rarely watch l’AntiChambre or any post game show for that matter, and I don’t listen to radio talk shows either, so I didn’t hear Carbo say that. That’s a very disappointing news to me if he said it that way… losing respect for the man I admired, if that’s the case.

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