VANCOUVER -- When the Vancouver Canucks lost to the Boston Bruins in the Stanley Cup final nearly three years ago, Robert MacKay was disappointed, but he still wanted to walk through downtown Vancouver to take in what he thought would be celebrations of a near win. Instead, he found himself caught in the violence that swept  through several downtown blocks. He was pummelled by a mob as he  tried to stop looters from targeting the Bay department store.

"I was punched. I was kicked. I was taken down to the ground,"  MacKay, a 39-year-old chef, testified Tuesday at the trial of four alleged rioters.

A group of 15 people punched and kicked MacKay and pepper sprayed  him on the night of June 15, 2011.
Ioannis Kangles, Michael MacDonald, Carlos Barahona Villeda and  David Leonati are charged with assault and taking part in a riot. They have pleaded not guilty. MacKay, who was hailed as hero by police for his efforts to fend off the looters, told court he headed to downtown Vancouver that day with plans to watch Game 7. Rather than try to fight for a spot in front of the CBC building, where a massive crowd of fans gathered to watch the game on outdoor screens, he decided to enjoy the match and a couple of beers with  his girlfriend and some friends at a nearby hotel, he recalled.

After the Canucks lost, MacKay and his girlfriend went back  outside, where they stood at a local intersection and gaped at the chaos.Masses of people were moving along the streets, kicking over newspaper boxes and destroying property, MacKay said. Black smoke  was billowing above a crowd near the CBC.

"It was almost embarrassing," MacKay said. "People just lost  their minds."

MacKay said he also saw smoke coming out of parkade across from  the Bay, which is a few blocks away from the CBC, so he told his  girlfriend to stay put while he investigated. Outside the Bay, a group of people were trying to break the  store's windows, he said. One person would walk towards a window and give it a kick or try  to smash it with something, he testified, and if the glass didn't  break, another person would do the same. There were no police around at the time, he said, but a man wearing a Canucks jersey stood between the storefront and the angry  crowd, waving his arms around in an attempt to stop the group from  breaking in.

"I jumped in and tried to give him a hand, I tried to help  him," MacKay said. "I just thought I was doing the right thing."

When a store window broke, the crowd seemed to go wild, yelling  and hooting, he said.

"That's when someone tried to break into the store," he said. "When I saw that happen, I tried to prevent it by (putting him in) a bear hug and moving him off to the side."

That's when MacKay saw someone lunge at him with what he thought  was a window frame, he told the court. MacKay said he dodged it, picked up a pole and tried to use it to  move the crowd back. But the move left his back exposed, and that's  when he felt the punches and kicks that knocked him to the ground,  he said.

"I tried to cover my face and my head, like in the fetal  position," he said. "And I took blows to my ribs, to the back of  my head ... and then I was pepper sprayed once on the ground."

Eventually, two people hauled him off the ground and away from  the mob. With the help of police, MacKay was able to find his girlfriend and the pair began to make their way out of downtown. He said he took one last look before walking across Granville  Street bridge, which leads out of downtown over False Creek. A helicopter was circling above, police were blocking off bridges, and  smoke was billowing from the city, he recalled.

"It was an ugly sight," MacKay said. "It looked like a war  zone."

As MacKay spoke, three of the accused listened quietly, sitting  side-by-side in the court gallery. Leonati, who was taken into custody the night before for breaching his bail conditions, sat next  to a court sheriff. Two other men charged in MacKay's attack were convicted last May.
The riot caused millions of dollars in damages as cars were  burned, windows smashed, and stores looted.

To date, a total of 290 people have been charged in connection  with the riot, according to statistics on the Vancouver Police  Department's website.
Dozens of people have already pleaded guilty and received their  sentences, ranging from discharges to jail terms of a year or more.