Who knows how far MLSE will go.
The Toronto Maple Leafs are up 3–0 on the Ottawa Senators. Seems normal, if you ignore the fact that this series has more red flags than a power play in Vegas.
This isn’t about hockey anymore. It’s about control. And the referees? They’re just the frontmen for something much darker: MLSE’s Agenda.
Toronto didn’t win Game 1. They
activated it.
The Leafs came out like a team possessed. Ottawa couldn’t get a call if they mailed it in. Leafs power play? Flowing like Niagara. Sens power play? Refs swallowed the whistle like it was soaked in maple syrup.
A 6–2 win on the scoreboard—The Sens were never allowed in. Every time they built momentum, a “missed” call halted play. Curious stat: Toronto’s xGF (expected goals) was lower than Ottawa’s. How do you score 6 on fewer chances? Easy: when you control the outcome.
Refs looked away from interference, waved off obvious icings, and even blocked the camera view once during a Sens rush. Coincidence?
Gme 2 Overtime. Tied game. High pressure. And suddenly—Max Domi, who hadn’t scored in weeks, walks in untouched and ends it like he knew the script.
Rewind the tape. You’ll see it:
Domi
looks up before the rush—not at the puck, but toward the timekeeper’s booth.
The goal horn goes off 0.4 seconds before the puck crosses the line on one angle, then mysteriously syncs back up in the broadcast.
Only visible on freeze-frame.
Game 3, Simon Benoit. A stay-at-home defenseman. One career goal in the regular season. Suddenly becomes the hero in overtime, sniping the game-winner like he's
channeling Gretzky through the Matrix.