Montrealâs playoff nights are no longer limited to the seats inside the Bell Centre.
The Montreal Canadiens are expanding their free outdoor playoff watch party after huge crowds turned avenue des Canadiens-de-MontrĂŠal into a packed street celebration during the teamâs postseason run.
A third giant screen is being added outside the Bell Centre for Game 3 against the Buffalo Sabres, giving more fans a chance to follow the action together as the second-round series shifts back to Montreal.
The move comes after thousands of supporters filled the area during earlier playoff games, creating one of the loudest and most visible fan gatherings of this yearâs NHL postseason.
The Canadiens said the added screen is meant to handle the heavy demand for their âWatch Party-Street Edition,â which has quickly grown from a simple outdoor viewing area into a major downtown event.
For fans without tickets, the setup has become the closest thing to being inside the arena. No ticket is required to attend, and that has helped draw families, students, longtime supporters and casual fans into the same packed stretch outside the Bell Centre.
Montreal will host Buffalo on Sunday night in Game 3 with the series tied 1-1. The Canadiens return home with momentum after a strong 5-1 road win in Buffalo, a result that instantly lifted the mood around the city.
Canadiens playoff watch party becomes a downtown attraction
The scene outside the Bell Centre has changed quickly since the start of the playoffs.
Early watch parties were more contained, with tall fencing used to shape a narrow fan zone along avenue des Canadiens-de-MontrĂŠal. But as crowds grew larger, that setup became harder to manage.
Montreal police later asked for the barriers to be removed, saying they could create safety concerns and make it more difficult to move people out of the area in an emergency.
Since then, the focus has shifted toward keeping the space open while still controlling the flow of fans on busy game nights.
The decision to add another screen shows how quickly demand has outgrown the original plan. Instead of one central gathering point, the Canadiens are now trying to spread the crowd across a wider viewing area so more people can watch without forcing everyone into the same tight space.
That matters because Montrealâs playoff support has become part of the story itself. The crowd outside the arena has been reacting to every goal, save and big hit in real time, turning the street into a second version of the Bell Centre bowl.
For a city with one of hockeyâs deepest fan bases, these outdoor gatherings are more than a viewing option. They are a public reminder of how strongly the Canadiens still shape Montrealâs identity when playoff hockey returns.














