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Sens fans accused of sabotaging their own team before Game 1.
 

Sens fans accused of sabotaging their own team before Game 1.

Senators fans trying to cheer on their team before Game 1 may have cursed them instead.

Jonathan Larivee

It is time for the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs and that means that fans will be rallying behind their teams like never before in a bid to help give their team enough encouragement to be crowned the 2025 Stanley Cup champions.

Fans, short for fanatics, are of course incredibly passionate about their respective teams and at times are willing to go to great lengths in order to find ways to will those teams to victory. While the intentions are always good, sometimes things fall a little flat when it comes to the execution of some of those plans.

That appears to be the case for two different groups of Ottawa Senators fans who are currently being roasted on social media, with major personalities in the hockey world suggesting that they may have killed any hope of their team winning at all in the playoffs this season. In both cases the fans made songs about the Stanley Cup playoffs and unfortunately it both cases the response from the hockey world has been pretty harsh.

The first example came to us courtesy of "big boy boucher" on social media platform X, with big boi boucher suggesting the performance in the video may very well have cost his team the series. As if that wasn't bad enough, former National Hockey League player Paul Bissonnette, a notorious fan of the Toronto Maple Leafs, chimed in to suggest the Leafs will now win the series in just 5 games as a result of the song.

They weren't the only Senators fans catching some heat however, Bissonnette's co-host Ryan Whitney found another song made by a Senators fan and he disliked it so much that he suggested he might even have to start cheering for the Leafs.

"This might make me root for the Leafs," said Whitney in response to the song.

Bissonnette would once again chime in asking the Senators fans to "act like you've been there before" before adding that there was no coming back from this as far as the Senators fan base is concerned.

Are the two former NHLers being too harsh? Or have these attempts at making a song for the playoffs doomed the Senators before the series even begins?