
Buffalo Sabres fans might finally have a hockey team they can be proud of again. After 14 years on the outside of the playoffs and going through a perpetual rebuild that never seemed to end, the 2025-26 version of the team looks poised to return to the playoffs.
They have been one of the NHL's best teams since the calendar rolled over to December, and they delivered one of the biggest statement wins of the season on Saturday night with a wildly impressive 6-2 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning.
While the Sabres have been playing great hockey for the better part of the past three months, what makes their Saturday night win so impressive is that they absolutely dominated one of the NHL's best teams from the drop of the puck.
They jumped out to a 4-0 first-period lead and were in complete control the entire game.
Given that Tampa Bay entered Saturday's game with the best record in the Eastern Conference and had been on a 21-2-1 run over its previous 24 games, it only adds to the impressiveness of the Sabres performance.
Their win on Saturday, combined with the Detroit Red Wings' loss, has Buffalo in the top-three of the Atlantic Division (the top-three teams in each division are guaranteed playoff spots) and in a position to have home-ice advantage in the first-round of the playoffs.
Given how bad the Sabres have been for a decade-and-a-half, and how bad they looked at the start of the season when they fired general manager Kevyn Adams, this is an incredible in-season turnaround.
In most seasons, 96 points is generally good enough to guarantee a team a playoff spot. For the Sabres to reach that mark, they would need just 20 points over their remaining 22 games. That would be just 10 wins. In other words, they have put themselves in such a good position that they could realistically play slightly below .500 hockey the rest of the way and still do enough to get in the postseason. Given the way they are going right now, and given the way they just took care of the Lightning, they might not be a team anybody wants to play, either.
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