The Montreal Canadiens Will Officially Welcome Fans Back To The Bell Centre For Game 6

Go Habs Go!
Staff Writer

After a hard-fought and somewhat nervy overtime win against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday night, the Montreal Canadiens officially booked their ticket to game six of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. This means that for the first time this year, fans will be in at the Bell Centre cheering on their beloved Habs. 

Up to 2,500 fans will be in the stands on Saturday night and if you're looking to score tickets or are one of the lucky season ticket holders with first-time access, there are just a couple of things you should know before you go.

Editor's Choice: We Made It Montreal, Curfew Is Officially Over

With only 2,500 seats available, the Bell Centre has "built the ticketing manifest to allow for the sale of tickets in groupings identified as 'pods' of two and four seats to accommodate family members, friends and/or trusted acquaintances to attend together." There is a mandatory mask policy.

These "pods" will be located on the 100 and 300 sections of the Bell Centre. The first 12 rows of the lower bowl will be closed to fans to keep the players and coaches safe. 

Otherwise, it should be business as usual. If you're one of the lucky fans who are there on Saturday night, wear your colours and cheer as loud as you can to encourage the boys to put an end to the Leafs' hopes and dreams. 

  • Teddy Elliot
  • Teddy Elliot was a Staff Writer for MTL Blog. He was born and raised in Montreal, Quebec and has a B.A. in Literature. Teddy has been a journalist for three years and was once an English teacher. His creative work has appeared in The Blasted Tree and Parenthetical Magazine. When he's not chasing scoops, Teddy can be found cheering on Aston Villa and listening to 80s power ballads. He was shortlisted for a Digital Publishing Award in 2021.

A YouTuber biked the entire island of Montreal and it took less time than you might think

"Without leaving the island, I think this is the most beautiful long ride you can do."

Canada has updated its travel warnings for these 7 popular spring break destinations

Advisories range from "exercise a high degree of caution" to "avoid all travel."

Quebec's language police went after a Montreal bakery for too many English social media posts

"When the government thinks it has the right to impose the language you use on your own social media, that's going too far."

Montreal's Trudeau airport is warning of extra traffic chaos ahead of March break

The airport is demolishing a parking garage during one of the busiest travel seasons of the year.

Montreal Metro assaults are on the rise and they jumped by 15% last year alone

It's the highest number of assaults on the STM since the pandemic.

'Go Habs Go!' is finally coming back to Montreal buses after last year's language controversy

The STM was forced to switch to "Allez Canadiens Allez!" last year by Quebec's language watchdog.