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Sabres Ready to Snap Historic Postseason Nightmare
Mar 8, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; Buffalo Sabres goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (1) makes a save during the third period against the Tampa Bay Lightning at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The nightmare is almost over. After 14 agonizing seasons watching from home, the Buffalo Sabres stand on the verge of ending the longest playoff drought in NHL history. Last night's wild 8-7 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning wasn't just another win.

It was a statement that this team had finally exorcised the demons that had haunted Western New York since 2011. The Sabres sit atop the Atlantic Division as of today with a seven-game winning streak behind them and playoff odds hovering near 98 percent.

For a fanbase that has endured every imaginable disappointment over the past decade and a half, the question is no longer if Buffalo will return to the postseason but when they'll officially punch their ticket.

Historic Suffering

The drought began on April 26, 2011, when the Flyers eliminated Buffalo in a first-round Game 7. Since that night in Philadelphia, nearly an entire generation of hockey fans in Western New York has grown up knowing only regular season mediocrity and spring golf.

The 14-year absence from the playoffs is an NHL record, tied with the New York Jets for the longest active drought across all major North American sports. The pain runs deeper than simple loss. The Sabres fired seven coaches during the drought.

They cycled through general managers and ownership changes. They endured tough seasons and false dawns, watching prospects fail to develop and veterans depart for greener pastures. The franchise became a cautionary tale about organizational dysfunction and mismanagement.

Wild Comeback Validates Belief

The shootout victory against the Lightning showcased why this year feels different. Old Sabres teams would have wilted when trailing in a game featuring 15 combined goals and constant momentum swings. This group battled back repeatedly, treating each Tampa Bay surge as just another challenge to overcome rather than an excuse to fold.

The KeyBank Arena crowd provided a serious test to the building's structural integrity. After years of frustration and empty playoff springs, Buffalo fans finally have a team worth screaming about. The seven-game winning streak has pushed the Sabres into first place in the Atlantic Division, ahead of the team they just defeated.

Path Forward

Buffalo hasn't clinched a playoff spot yet, but the math has become almost impossible to overcome. With roughly 20 games remaining and an eight-point cushion over the final wild card spot, the Sabres would need to collapse spectacularly to miss the postseason.

Their 39-19-6 record represents the kind of sustained excellence that has eluded the franchise for 14 years. Can Buffalo maintain this level through April and finally return to playoff hockey? Will they prove capable of doing damage once they get there?

The answers will define whether this season represents a genuine rebirth or just another tease for tortured fans.

This article first appeared on Breakaway on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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