The first game in history between the Senators and the Canadiens was played Jan. 22, 1910, a 5-4 overtime victory for Ottawa on home ice. The Ottawa Citizen rather enjoyed the spectacle, its all-caps headline loudly proclaiming, "GREATEST CROWD IN THE HISTORY OF HOCKEY SAW MOST EXCITING MATCH IN MANY YEARS."
It wasn't an easy victory for the Senators, who surrendered a three-goal lead in the third period in front of an arena-bulging 7,500 fans, with kids crawling out onto steel girders over the rink for better viewing. The home team was pushed to overtime before winning on a goal by future Hockey Hall of Famer Marty Walsh.
"The Canadiens, of course, played their usual spectacular hockey," the Citizen reported, "(Jack) Laviolette and (Didier) Pitre hurdling sticks, crashing into the boards, flipping about like circus clowns and travelling backwards as neatly as trick skaters."
The game, when Ottawa goaltender Percy Lesueur outdueled Montreal's
Georges Vezina
, was notable for a flipped puck by the Senators' Hamby Shore that shattered a bulb over the rink, showering the ice with glass.
"Every French-Canadian hockey fan in Ottawa, it seemed, was also on the spot," the Citizen reported. "Whenever the Canadiens scored, their supporters almost shook the building to pieces."
Little has changed in that regard during the subsequent 100-plus years. Canadiens fans have always had a huge presence whenever their team plays in Ottawa, a mere 140 miles from Montreal. Saturday should be no different.
"I think it's going to be great," Senators defenseman Erik Karlsson said. "And just overall, playing Montreal, it's a team that has a big fan base in this city, so it's going to create a lot of good things."
The first time the Senators and Canadiens played each other in the NHL was in Ottawa on Dec. 19, 1917. "Phantom Joe" Malone put five goals behind Senators goalie Clint Benedict in a 7-4 Montreal victory. Ottawa's Cy Denneny scored a hat trick of his own.