41 arrested in mayhem in Montreal

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MONTREAL -- Police regained control of the downtown core early Thursday after firing tear gas at hundreds of bottle-tossing youths who looted businesses following the Montreal Canadiens' Game 7 victory in Pittsburgh.

The vandalism occurred after most of the tens of thousands of jubilant hockey fans left the area.

Looters wrapped their faces in garments -- in some cases the ones they'd stolen -- and dashed into a liquor store. With their identities concealed, they leaped through the smashed front window and emerged moments later with their arms full.

One man warned his female friend to be careful with the loot.

"Hide the bottle," he snapped. "The police."

He was referring to the line of officers who watched impassively from the closest street corner. Their reinforcements were on the way.

Rows of black-clad riot officers charged in from the peripheries, rattling their shields as a warning to the crowd before firing tear-gas canisters.

Thursday, police said 41 people were arrested. Two officers sustained minor injuries.

Shortly after the Canadiens' 5-2 victory over the Penguins, fireworks erupted over Ste-Catherine Street as people crowd-surfed and held aloft trinkets including Stanley Cup replicas and a stuffed penguin.

The flag-waving crowd was as euphoric as the 21,000 fans who crammed into the Bell Centre to watch the game on giant screens. After the game, they spilled out into the streets chanting, "We want the Cup! We want the Cup!"

Now some merchants worry about what awaits in the next series against Boston or Philadelphia. But they also acknowledge that the Canadiens' great playoff run has electrified the city and boosted business.

Montreal has a history of hockey-related violence.

Cars were burned and downtown stores were trashed and looted after the Canadiens beat Boston in the 2008 playoffs, and there also were riots after Montreal's Stanley Cup victories in 1986 and 1993. The most famous riot was in 1955 when Habs great Maurice Richard was suspended and fans took to the street to cause such havoc that Richard had to make a public appeal for calm.
 

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And nobody cares? But yet, if this was Detroit, it would be nationwide news and everyone would be ripping on the city of Detroit....yet, this happens all the time in Montreal and other cities....When Detroit wins titles, nothing ever happens...yet people still think its 1984 when it happened....Sheesh, Montreal didnt even win anything....would hate to see what happens if they win the cup....

Gasm~
 

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Maybe you have to live in Canada to understand just how retarded most Montreal fans are. They feel inferior to English speaking Canada, and apparently this is their way of confirming just that.


@)
 

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Maybe you have to live in Canada to understand just how retarded most Montreal fans are. They feel inferior to English speaking Canada, and apparently this is their way of confirming just that.


@)

Yup!
For me, no rag on Montreal fans just Quebec in general!
 

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I don't recall riots when the Senators won a playoff series, or the Flames. The mentality of hockey "fans" in Montreal may be equated with soccer hooligans. Just a bunch of losers looking for an excuse to do dumb shit.
 

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