On Sunday, it was Hockey Day In America. Both the NHL on TNT and ESPN showed doubleheaders, featuring eight teams. Although the best game between the Wild and Avalanche was decided in a shootout on Nathan MacKinnon’s winner, it paled in comparison to the show the Lightning and Sabres gave in a first place battle in Buffalo.
A game that wasn’t shown on national TV turned into the game of the year. It featured five fights, melees, and 15 combined goals between the two teams who combined for 102 penalty minutes. The Sabres rallied from a 7-5 third period deficit to beat the Lightning 8-7 before a full house. Their seventh consecutive win moved them into sole possession of first in the Atlantic Division.
The fun started early when Brandon Hagel boarded Tage Thompson, leading to a fracas. Darren Raddysh went after Rasmus Dahlin, who obliged him in the first fight of many. It only intensified from there. Following a Josh Doan power-play goal, former Ranger Sam Carrick introduced himself to Buffalo by giving up size and strength against Scott Sabourin in the second scrap of the period. Although he lost the battle, fans went nuts.
Things got even crazier on the following shift. With the teams at each other’s throats during a heated scrum, several players got together. While Bowen Byram and Charlie-Eduoard D’astous exchanged plesantries, Hagel and Peyton Krebs fought in amother battle. Hagel got the better of Krebs, who joined Byram and D’astous in an already crowded box that included a few players from each side.
Kucherov and Mattias Samuelsson went after each other following a stoppage, exchanging slashes. A few minutes later, both Erik Cernak and Michael Kesselring each received unsportsmanlike conducts. Throughout the game, there was plenty of yapping going on. Aside from all the penalties, the scoring picked up over the remainder. That wasn’t the only thing that happened.
Before six seconds had even gone by in the second period, there were two more fights between Cernak and Kesselring and Corey Perry and Beck Malenstyn, who exchanged heavy blows in the best bout of the night.
On another power play, the Sabres made it 2-for-2 thanks to Dahlin setting up Jason Zucker for a 2-0 lead. It got even more hectic when Hagel attacked Dahlin from behind, repeatedly hitting him to earn four minutes for roughing. Alex Tuch made the Sabres a perfect 3-for-3 when he tipped in a Thompson shot to increase the lead to three.
Once things calmed down, the Lightning got themselves back in it. After Perry and Tuch exchanged goals, Kucherov had his shot take a friendly bounce in front to make it 4-2 on the power play. That goal sparked the Bolts to finish the period strong by getting the last three goals to draw even.
Former Sabre Zemgus Girgensons made it 4-3. Then, some sloppy play from the Sabres allowed J.J. Moser to tie the game.
The Lightning rode the momentum by getting the first two goals of the third period to suddenly surge ahead by two. After Kucherov got his second of the game, Brayden Point put away a loose puck with Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen down and out following a strong move from Oliver Bjorkstrand. On the next shift, Carrick took a Zach Benson pass in the neutral zone and scored his first as a Sabre to make it 6-5. He skated in and made a perfect shot to beat Jonas Johansson. In one game, he welcomed himself to Buffalo by taking on a bigger foe and scoring a big goal. There were plenty of fans in the Big Apple with grins.
When Hagel restored a two-goal lead for the Lightning at almost the halfway point of the third, it felt like the game was over, but it was far from it. Less than two minutes later, it was Sabres captain Dahlin who scored a beautiful goal to pull the Sabres within 7-6. After taking a Thompson feed, he went right around and moved in to bury his 13th, igniting the crowd once again.
With the building still buzzing from Dahlin’s highlight reel goal, Zucker got behind the Lightning defense, broke in and scored his second to make the score lucky seven’s.
Instead of going to overtime, the Sabres went back ahead thanks to Doan’s second power-play goal of the night coming with 4:17 remaining. Doan is up to a career-high 21 goals in his first season for Buffalo. He and Kesselring came over from the Mammoth for J.J. Peterka. A deal former Sabres general manager Kevyn Adams made last year. That has proven to be a gift due to Doan, who has five more points than Peterka.
The Sabres were able to protect the lead to earn the victory. Of course, it didn’t come without one more scrum at the buzzer. They’ve now beaten the Lightning twice over a nine-day period. The fourth and final meeting is on April 6.
Now that he’s healthy, Kesselring has helped solidified a blue line that’ll be even better once trade deadline acquisition Logan Stanley debuts. He and veteran Luke Schenn were acquired from the Jets for Isak Rosen, Jacob Bryson, a 2026 conditional fourth round pick, and a 2027 second round pick. A steep price to pay. If they can help the Sabres go far in what will be their first postseason in 15 years, no one will care. Especially if they wind up winning it all.
None of this looked possible three months ago. However, the Sabres have been the NHL’s hottest team over the last three months. Since dropping to 11-14-4 on Dec. 8, they’re an absurd 28-5-2 – vaulting to the top of the standings. With 18 games left, they have the fifth most points. Now two up on the Lightning, who have two games in hand, they’re challenging for the top spot in the division. Even the Hurricanes are only two points up for the best record in the Eastern Conference. Astonishingly, the Sabres have the most regulation wins (33) in the conference. If they stay hot, that could come in handy this spring.
Nobody could’ve predicted this turnaround. The Sabres are proof that having plenty of character and chemistry matters. The amount of battles they got into against a former two-time Stanley Cup winner is proof that they won’t back down from anyone. Even the Lightning, who know a thing or two about intense rivalries. Now, they can add the Sabres to that list.
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