Mike Harrington: Sabres somehow still have life after a wacky first half


The Buffalo Sabres have been all over the road map in the first half of this season. Figuratively and literally.

They've been to Czechia and California. Columbus and Chicago. Dallas and Denver. The Rocky Mountains and the Vegas Strip. And even spent what turned into three miserable days in Toronto and Montreal, two places that are normally a hockey player's dream to visit.

So much has already happened that it's a season that feels like it's gone on for three years, even though it's been only three months. Terry Pegula spoke to the team but has otherwise been invisible. Kevyn Adams appears frozen. Lindy Ruff has to be wondering what he got himself into.

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The Buffalo Sabres celebrate goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen’s game-winning save during the shootout against the Washington Capitals at
KeyBank Center on Monday, Jan. 6, 2025. Joed Viera/Buffalo News


The Sabres won only of 15 of 41 games in the first half after Monday's 4-3 shootout win over Washington, the surprise leader in the East. They lost 13 in a row at one stretch and should be so far out of things that we should already be choking over thoughts of the draft lottery and pondering who's packing up at the trade deadline.

Those things are still very much in play. All of you who checked out on this team during that hideous winless streak were 100% thinking clearly.

But when you looked at the standings after Monday's game and saw that Montreal, of all teams, had snuck into the last East wild card, you also noticed Sabres were just six points back of the Canadiens. Not 16 points or 26. Six.

"I don't want to talk about the playoffs honestly," Alex Tuch told me after a strong game against the Caps that included two goals in regulation and clutch Round 3 shootout goal that kept his team alive. "Just keep playing."

I reminded Tuch that a 13-game losing streak almost always means season over, and that somehow isn't the case for this group. He got my point.

"Look, we're going to take it day by day," Tuch said. "You guys can talk about the standings and everything but we're not. We can't. We're just worried about playing the best game we can play every tomorrow we have. That's what we have to do. That's all there is to it."

Point taken. Although Thursday's collapse in Colorado still looks and feels like a season-killer, don't forget it actually only cost the Sabres one point in the standings. They got one in overtime and the team they were playing is in the Western Conference, not the East.

This corner, in fact, has heard from some folks in other cities wondering if the Sabres are still a team to be heard from. ESPN's John Buccigross tweeted exactly that after Monday's win too. After I attended Thursday's disaster in Denver -- a game viewed in Buffalo as a complete debacle but one NHL watchers elsewhere say is one of the games of the year in the league -- my phone and X feed lit up unlike after any other contest in the last 17 seasons I've traveled with this team.

Everyone wants to know how Adams views this and what kind of moves he can make. And how Ruff is handling things. You could tell Mount Lindy was close to blowing its top Thursday, but that just won't work with this fragile group.

"It's been a lot about trying to insert some confidence in players that at times were feeling a lot of stress," Ruff said Monday. "Same stress the coaches feel but they're on the ice playing. And when that many bad things happen, they're looking to places for answers."

A lot is going to change here every night. Tuesday for instance, Pittsburgh is at Columbus and that winner is going to pass the idle Habs and drop the Sabres further in arrears. Ottawa could too with a win over Detroit before hosting the Sabres on Thursday.

That gives you an idea of the math for Buffalo. It's not just the number of points, but it's the number of teams to pass. The Sabres, remember, are still last in the East! Truly bizarre.

They're going to need a long winning streak that probably has to be at least in the 8-game range. That, of course, is a problem for this team -- which doesn't have a win streak of at least four games since January, 2023.

But there are some interesting signs here too. Tage Thompson, whom Ruff admitted has been battling through some sort of injury for a few weeks, is getting healthier and looks terrific on right wing. JJ Peterka had his best game in weeks Monday night. So did Ryan McLeod, who has been too far down the lineup and skated well with Peterka and Tuch. Jason Zucker has been a godsend.

The power play has run hot and cold all season and now it's on another heater, an NHL-best 44.4% since Dec. 21 and a 6-for-11 scorcher in the last four games.

"You have to have a short mindset," said Thompson, who is at 19 goals after his power-play rocket in the second period. "It's who can stay mentally strongest all the way till the end of the season. There's going to be some teams that will go on cold streaks and some teams that are going to go on hot streaks and it's going to separate."

The Sabres keep playing from in front too. They've scored first in 24 of 41 games and been leading or tied after 20 minutes in 30 of the 41. They need another veteran defenseman to help protect some leads. And then, who knows?

"It should drive all of us to know you're that close and to go through what we went through. ... everybody should come out as a better player and understand how hard it is to win games and sometimes how easy it is to lose them," Ruff said. "I think we've got some players that are growing, that understand now there's no easy game and no easy play. We're fortunate the way everything has kind of unfolded that we're within striking distance."

Sure are. But it's true. Still 41 games left
 

The Athletic: Sabres aren’t counting themselves out of playoffs despite an ugly first half​


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With a 4-3 shootout win over the Washington Capitals on Monday, the Buffalo Sabres finished the first half of their season with a 15-21-5 record. That’s good for 35 points and a .427 points percentage, both of which are the worst in the Eastern Conference.

If you’re the glass-half-full type, you might look at the Eastern Conference standings and notice the Montreal Canadiens are in a wild-card spot with 41 points. For the Sabres to go through a 13-game winless streak during an ugly first half to the season and be six points out is somewhat fortunate. In the Western Conference, the Sabres would be 10 points back of the second wild-card spot.

“It should drive all of us to know you’re that close,” Sabres coach Lindy Ruff said after the game. “When you go through what we went through, you should come out of it a better team. Everybody should come out as a better player and understand how hard it is to win games and sometimes how easy it is to lose them. We’ve got some players that are growing and understand now there’s no easy game and no easy play. But we’re fortunate the way everything has unfolded, we’re within striking distance with (41) games left.”

The six-point gap doesn’t paint the whole picture of where the Sabres are, though. They need to leapfrog eight teams to get into that second wild-card spot. Of those eight teams, they’ve played more games than seven of them, with only the Pittsburgh Penguins also sitting at 41 games. The Sabres are closer than they should be considering the 0-10-3 stretch that buried them in the standings.

But right now, the Ottawa Senators are in the second wild-card spot based on points percentage. They’re on pace for 86 points. The Sabres would need to play at a 101-point pace just to hit 86 points. It’s far from a guarantee that 86 points will be good enough. If that number is 90, the Sabres need to play at a 110-point pace the rest of the way.

“It’s a long season,” Sabres forward Tage Thompson said. “A lot can happen. You can never count yourself out. You just have to have a short-term mindset. You have to look at it one game at a time. Anything can happen.

“Obviously in our division there’s a lot of teams that are right there in the mix, a handful of points away from each other. It’s just who can stay mentally strongest all the way until the end of the season. There’s going to be teams that are going to go on cold streaks and some teams that are going to go on hot streaks. It’s going to separate and we need to find ourselves in a hot streak.”

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Tage Thompson scored in the second period against the Capitals to help the Sabres earn an overtime win. (Timothy T. Ludwig / Imagn Images)

The Sabres haven’t been able to find themselves in one of those hot streaks this season. Buffalo has four separate three-game winning streaks. They’re 0-4 when trying to extend those streaks to four games. This team hasn’t won four games in a row since roughly midway through the 2022-23 season.

Buffalo’s players and coaches don’t need to be thinking about any of that, though. Thompson is right when he says they need to take a short-term mindset. They need to be focused on playing more games like they have during this recent 4-2-1 stretch, when they’ve looked more like that team that was expected to hang around the wild-card race this season. Their special teams are showing improvement, they’ve played some strong defensive games and they aren’t crumbling at the first sign of adversity.

“The work ethic our group has shown the last two or three weeks has been a lot better,” forward Alex Tuch said. “The commitment to playing the right way, to better D-zone, to blocking shots, to sacrificing for one another has been a lot better. It hasn’t been perfect by any means. It needs to continue to be better.”

That’s all the Sabres should be worried about. While the recent seven-game stretch has been an improvement, the flaws on this team haven’t vanished.

They only have one goalie they can really rely on. The forward group is a work in progress. They’re also still searching for line combinations that will unlock more consistent offense. Thompson is playing the wing while he plays through an injury. Jiri Kulich also left the game against the Capitals Monday night with a lower-body injury. Jack Quinn, who was supposed to provide scoring in the top six, was skating on the fourth line to start the game.

The same can be said of the blue line. Owen Power has had six defensive partners this season (Connor Clifton was his partner Monday). Injuries and inconsistent play have led Ruff to shuffle the second and third defensive pairs often.

All of that has contributed to a miserable first half of the season. They’re showing some positive signs, but they have a long way to go before playoffs enter the conversation after the hole they’ve dug themselves into.

“It’s been a lot about trying to insert some confidence in some players who, at times, were feeling a lot of stress,” Ruff said of the first half of the season. “The same stress the coaches feel but they’re on the ice playing. When that many bad things happen, they’re looking to places for answers. They’re looking to us to help with the answers.

“We’ve changed quite a few things about the way we play. I think it’s helped our team. I think we’re getting pretty confident now about what we want to do with the puck. Our puck support has been a lot better. I think we’re on our way out of it.”
 
The same can be said of the blue line. Owen Power has had six defensive partners this season (Connor Clifton was his partner Monday). Injuries and inconsistent play have led Ruff to shuffle the second and third defensive pairs often.
No one wants to play with Power because he's no good.
 
He's invisible. His first 2 years, he was very visible on the ice and made great offensive rushes but he's barely noticeable now on the ice
Probably the Granato vs Ruff coaching. Granato coddled everyone. Ruff expects him to play like a man, which he can't do.
 
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