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Buffalo Sabres

Template:Team in Buffalo

Buffalo Sabres
2022–23 Buffalo Sabres season
ConferenceEastern
DivisionAtlantic
Founded1970
HistoryBuffalo Sabres
1970–present
Home arenaKeyBank Center
CityBuffalo, New York
ColorsRoyal blue, gold, white[1][2][3]
     
MediaMSG Western New York
WGR 550
Sabres Hockey Network
Owner(s)Terry Pegula
General managerKevyn Adams
Head coachDon Granato
CaptainKyle Okposo
Minor league affiliatesRochester Americans (AHL)
Cincinnati Cyclones (ECHL)
Stanley Cups0
Conference championships3 (1974–75, 1979–80, 1998–99)
Presidents' Trophy1 (2006–07)
Division championships6 (1974–75, 1979–80, 1980–81, 1996–97, 2006–07, 2009–10)
Official websitewww.nhl.com/sabres

The Buffalo Sabres are a professional ice hockey team based in Buffalo, New York. The Sabres compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference. The team was established in 1970, along with the Vancouver Canucks, when the league expanded to 14 teams. The Sabres have played their home games at KeyBank Center since 1996, having previously played at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium since their inception. The Sabres are owned by Terry Pegula, who purchased the club in 2011 from Tom Golisano.

The team has twice advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals, losing to the Philadelphia Flyers in 1975 and to the Dallas Stars in 1999. The Sabres, along with the Canucks, are the oldest active NHL franchises to have never won the Stanley Cup.[4] The Sabres have the longest active playoff drought in the NHL, at eleven seasons, which stands as an NHL record.[5]

History

Early years and the French Connection (1970–1981)

The Sabres, along with the Vancouver Canucks, joined the NHL in the 1970–71 season. Their first owners were Seymour H. Knox III and Northrup Knox, scions of a family long prominent in Western New York and grandsons of the co-founders of the Woolworth's variety store chain; along with Robert O. Swados, a Buffalo attorney. On the team's inaugural board of directors were Robert E. Rich Jr., later the owner of the Buffalo Bisons minor league baseball team; and George W. Strawbridge Jr., an heir to the Campbell Soup Company fortune. Buffalo had a history of professional hockey; immediately prior to the Sabres' establishment, the Buffalo Bisons were a pillar of the American Hockey League (AHL), having existed since 1940 (and before that, another Bisons hockey team played from 1928 to 1936), winning the Calder Cup in their final season.[6]

Wanting a name other than "bison" (a generic stock name used by Buffalo sports teams for decades), the Knoxes commissioned a name-the-team contest. With names like "Mugwumps", "Buzzing Bees" and "Flying Zeppelins" being entered,[7] the winning choice, "Sabres", was chosen because Seymour Knox felt a sabre, a weapon carried by a leader, could be effective on offense and defense.[A][B] The Knoxes tried twice before to get an NHL team, first when the NHL expanded in 1967, and again when they attempted to purchase the Oakland Seals with the intent of moving them to Buffalo. Their first attempt was thwarted when Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney persuaded his horse racing friends James and Bruce Norris to select Pittsburgh over Buffalo,[9] while the second attempt was due to the NHL not wanting an expansion market to give up on a team so soon, nor isolate the Los Angeles Kings (the only NHL team other than the Seals west of St. Louis at the time) from the rest of the NHL entirely. At the time of their creation, the Sabres exercised their option to create their own AHL farm team, the Cincinnati Swords. Former Toronto Maple Leafs general manager and head coach Punch Imlach was hired in the same capacity with the Sabres.

The year the Sabres debuted (1970) was an important year for major league sports in Buffalo. In addition to the Sabres' debut, the Buffalo Bills officially joined the National Football League, and the National Basketball Association's Buffalo Braves also began to play, sharing Memorial Auditorium with the Sabres. The city of Buffalo went from having no teams in the established major professional sports leagues to three in one off-season, a situation that proved to be unsustainable. Between the Braves and the Sabres, the Sabres would prove to be by far the more successful of the two; Paul Snyder, the nouveau riche Braves owner, publicly feuded with the old money Knoxes and the local college basketball scene, eventually losing those feuds and being forced to sell his team in 1976. Subsequent owners of the Braves, in a series of convoluted transactions tied to the ABA–NBA merger, moved the team out of Buffalo.

When the Sabres debuted as an expansion team, they took the ice to Aram Khachaturian's Armenian war dance, "Sabre Dance".[10] The music has been associated with the team as an unofficial anthem ever since.[11] It is often played between periods and after goals.

The consensus was that the first pick in the 1970 NHL Amateur Draft would be junior phenomenon Gilbert Perreault. Either the Sabres or the Canucks would get the first pick, to be determined with the spin of a wheel of fortune. Perreault was available to the Sabres and Canucks as this was the first year the Montreal Canadiens did not have a priority right to draft Quebec-born junior players.

The Canucks were allocated numbers 1–10 on the wheel, while the Sabres had 11–20. When league president Clarence Campbell spun the wheel, he initially thought the pointer landed on one. While Campbell was congratulating the Vancouver delegation, Imlach asked Campbell to check again. As it turned out, the pointer was on 11, effectively handing Perreault to the Sabres.[12] Perreault scored 38 goals in his rookie season of 1970–71, at the time a record for most goals scored by a NHL rookie, and he received the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's rookie of the year. Despite Perreault's play, the Sabres finished well out of playoff contention.

 
A statue of the French Connection line stands outside KeyBank Center. Consisting of Gilbert Perreault, Rick Martin, and Rene Robert, they played together from 1972 to 1979.

In the team's second season, 1971–72, rookie Rick Martin, drafted fifth overall by Buffalo in 1971, and Rene Robert, acquired in a late-season trade from the Pittsburgh Penguins, joined Perreault and would become one of the league's top forward lines in the 1970s. Martin broke Perreault's record at once with 44 rookie goals. They were nicknamed "The French Connection" after the movie of the same name and in homage to their French-Canadian roots. The Sabres made the playoffs for the first time in 1972–73, just the team's third year in the league, but lost in the quarterfinals in six games to the eventual Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens.

After a subpar year in 1974 that saw them miss the playoffs (as well as aging defenseman Tim Horton's death in a DUI-induced car accident), the Sabres tied for the best record in the NHL in the 1974–75 regular season. Buffalo advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in team history to play against the rough Philadelphia Flyers (who had been recently nicknamed the "Broad Street Bullies"), a series which included the legendary Fog Game (Game 3 of the series). Due to unusual heat in Buffalo in May 1975 and the lack of air conditioning in the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, parts of the game were played in heavy fog that made players, officials, and the puck invisible to many spectators. During a face-off and through the fog, Sabres center Jim Lorentz spotted a bat flying across the rink, swung at it with his stick, killing it. It was the only time that any player killed an animal during an NHL game. The Sabres won that game thanks to Rene Robert's goal in overtime. However, Philadelphia would wind up taking the Stanley Cup in six games, winning the series 4–2.

The French Connection, joined by 50–goal scorer Danny Gare, continued to score prolifically for the Sabres in 1975–76, but the team lost in the quarterfinals to the New York Islanders. The Sabres had success through the late 1970s behind Gare and the French Connection (Perreault, Martin and Robert), but they were unable to return to the Finals despite a Wales Conference championship in 1980 and being the first team to beat the Soviet Olympic Team when they toured the United States. The French Connection era ended with Robert's trade to the Colorado Rockies in 1979 and Martin's trade to the Los Angeles Kings in 1981, by which time Martin's career was essentially finished as the result of a devastating knee injury in 1980. All three players have had their sweater numbers (11, 7 and 14, respectively) retired and a statue erected in their honor at KeyBank Center in 2012.

Adams/Northeast Division rivalries (1981–1996)

In 1981–82, the NHL realigned its conferences and adopted an intra-divisional playoff format for the first two rounds. It was the beginning of an era in which the Sabres would finish in the middle of the Adams Division standings with regularity, and then face the near-certainty of having to get past either the Boston Bruins or Canadiens to make it to the conference finals. Aside from first-round victories over Montreal in 1982–83 and Boston in 1992–93, the era saw the Sabres lose to division rivals Boston, the Quebec Nordiques and Montreal in the Adams Division semi-finals (first round) a combined eight times, and miss the playoffs altogether in 1985–86 and 1986–87—only third and fourth times out of the playoffs in franchise history. Perrault reached the 500-goal mark in the 1985–86 season and retired after playing 20 games in 1986–87, 17 years after joining the Sabres as their first draft pick.

The Sabres drafted Pierre Turgeon with the first pick in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft, and he quickly made an impact with the team. During his rookie season in 1987–88, he helped the Sabres reach the playoffs for the first time in three years. He was joined in 1989 by Alexander Mogilny, who with the help of Sabres officials became the first Soviet player to defect to the NHL, and cleared the way for all other Russian players to follow. In the 1989–90 season, the Sabres would improve to finish with 98 points—third-best in the NHL—but the playoff futility continued with a first-round loss to Montreal. The Sabres traded Turgeon to the New York Islanders in 1991 as part of a blockbuster seven-player trade that brought Pat LaFontaine to Buffalo.

In 1992–93, goaltender Dominik Hasek joined the team in a trade from the Chicago Blackhawks. In the 1993 playoffs, the Sabres upset the Bruins in a four-game sweep in the Adams Division semi-finals, their first playoff series victory in ten years. Brad May's series-winning goal in overtime of Game 4 in Buffalo was made famous by Rick Jeanneret's "May Day!" call. However, the eventual Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens swept the Sabres in the division final, with the Sabres losing all four games by a 4–3 score (the last three games in overtime).

With the NHL adopting a conference playoff format for the 1993–94 season, the Sabres faced the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference playoffs' first round. Despite Hasek winning a 1–0 (quadruple overtime) goaltending duel with the Devils' Martin Brodeur in Game 6—the Sabres' longest game ever, which went into quadruple overtime—Buffalo would lose the series in seven games. Another first-round playoff loss to the Philadelphia Flyers in the lockout-shortened 1994–95 season was followed by a fifth-place finish in the Northeast Division in 1995–96, as the team missed the playoffs for the first time in nine years. It was the first season under head coach Ted Nolan and the last for the Sabres at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium. Nolan brought an exciting brand of hockey to Buffalo. During his coaching tenure, Buffalo was referred to as the "hardest-working team in hockey".[13] This season also featured the debut of "walk-on" veteran Randy Burridge, who earned a spot on the roster after he attended training camp on a try-out basis. He scored 25 goals that season and was second in team scoring to Pat LaFontaine. Burridge also earned the Tim Horton Award for being the unsung hero and was voted team Most Valuable Player.

The final game in Memorial Auditorium was played on April 14, 1996, a 4–1 victory over the Hartford Whalers. Sabres principal owner Seymour Knox died a month later, on May 22, 1996.

The black and red era (1996–2006)

Ted Nolan and the Sabres rebounded in 1996–97, their first at Marine Midland Arena, by winning their first division title in 16 years, with Nolan winning the Jack Adams Award as the NHL's top coach, Dominik Hasek winning both the Hart and Vezina Trophies (the first goaltender to do so since Montreal's Jacques Plante in 1962), Michael Peca taking home the Frank J. Selke Trophy as the best defensive forward in the NHL and general manager John Muckler honored as Executive of the Year.

However, the regular-season success was overshadowed by what had taken place during the playoffs. Tensions between Nolan and Hasek had been high for most of the season. After being scored upon in Game 3 of the first round against the Ottawa Senators, Hasek left the game, forcing backup Steve Shields to step in. Hasek claimed he felt his knee pop, and the team doctor pronounced him day-to-day. The Buffalo News columnist Jim Kelley wrote a column that night for the next day's newspaper that detailed the day's events, which irked Hasek. After the Senators won Game 5, Hasek came out of the Sabres' training room and attacked Kelley, tearing his shirt. Despite the fact Hasek issued an apology, things went downhill after the incident. Shields starred as the Sabres rallied to win the series against Ottawa. But before the next series against the Philadelphia Flyers, the NHL announced Hasek had been suspended for three games, with the Sabres informing the NHL Hasek was healthy (Hasek most likely would not have been suspended had he not been cleared to play). Set to return in Game 4 with the Sabres down by three games to none, Hasek told the Sabres' coaching staff he felt a twinge in his knee and left the ice after the pre-game skate. Shields turned in another season-saving performance as Buffalo staved off elimination with a win in overtime. Again before Game 5, Hasek declared himself unfit to play and Buffalo lost 6–3 and the series.

Team president Larry Quinn fired general manager John Muckler, who had a noted feud with Nolan. Hasek, who supported Muckler, openly told reporters at the NHL Awards Ceremony he did not respect Nolan, placing new general manager Darcy Regier in a tough position. He offered Nolan just a one-year contract for a reported $500,000. Nolan refused on the grounds his previous contract was for two years. Regier then pulled the contract off the table and did not offer another one, ending Nolan's tenure as Sabres coach. Nolan was offered several jobs from the Tampa Bay Lightning and New York Islanders, which he turned down, and was out of the NHL until June 2006 when he was named coach of the Islanders. Former Sabres captain Lindy Ruff was hired as head coach on July 21, 1997, agreeing to a three-year contract. The Sabres organization, after having their most successful season in nearly two decades, had fired both the reigning NHL Executive of the Year (Muckler) and Coach of the Year (Nolan).

New owners and return to the Finals

During the 1997–98 season, the Sabres, which had lost $32 million over the previous three seasons and nearly missed payroll in December 1997,[14] were sold by Northrop Knox to John Rigas, owner of Adelphia Communications. Shortly thereafter, Quinn was dismissed and replaced by John Rigas' son, Timothy Rigas. Behind Hasek, left-winger Miroslav Satan (who led the team in scoring), right-winger Donald Audette, center Michael Peca and several role-playing journeymen including Matthew Barnaby, the Sabres reached the Eastern Conference Finals that season, but lost to the Washington Capitals in six games.

 
The Sabres playing a game during the 1998–99 season. The Sabres were later crowned the Eastern Conference champions following the 1999 Stanley Cup playoffs.

In 1998–99, Miroslav Satan scored 40 goals. The Sabres would add centers Stu Barnes from the Pittsburgh Penguins and Joe Juneau from the Capitals. Michal Grosek had the best season of his career, and the team finally returned to the Stanley Cup Finals, this time against the Presidents' Trophy winner, the Dallas Stars. In Game 6, Stars winger Brett Hull's triple-overtime goal ended the series, and the Stars were awarded the Cup. In 1999, it was illegal to score a goal if an offensive player's skate entered the crease before the puck did. However, NHL officials maintained that Hull's two shots in the goal mouth constituted a single possession of the puck since the puck deflected off Hasek. The rule was changed for the following season, allowing players to be inside the goaltender's crease as long as they do not interfere with the goaltender.

The next year was a disappointing season. The team struggled in the regular season, due to injuries to Hasek as well as other tired and discouraged players. Doug Gilmour was acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks at the trade deadline and sparked the Sabres to a playoff berth. However, Gilmour was stricken by stomach flu during the postseason, and even Hasek's return could not prevent a first-round playoff series loss to the Philadelphia Flyers. Like the previous season, there would be an officiating controversy. In Game 2, Flyers left wing John LeClair put the puck in the net through a hole in the mesh. While replays appeared to show the puck entering through the "side" of the net, the goal was allowed to stand. The Flyers would win the game 2–1 and go on to win the series four games to one.

Captain Michael Peca sat out 2000–01 due to a contract dispute, and was later traded to the New York Islanders in June 2001 in exchange for Tim Connolly and Taylor Pyatt. Even so, the Sabres still defeated Philadelphia in six games in the first round of the playoffs (with a resounding 8–0 victory in the series-winning game). In the second round, they faced the underdog Pittsburgh Penguins, led by rejuvenated superstar Mario Lemieux and captain Jaromir Jagr, who had won his fifth Art Ross Trophy that season, losing on a seventh-game overtime goal scored by defenseman Darius Kasparaitis. After lengthy and failed negotiations with their star goaltender, the Sabres traded Hasek to the Detroit Red Wings in the summer of 2001, bringing a five-year era of playoff success to a close. Without Hasek and Peca, the Sabres missed the 2002 playoffs.

Ownership turmoil and lockout

In May 2002, John Rigas and his sons were indicted for bank, wire and securities fraud for embezzling more than $2 billion from Adelphia. Rigas was later convicted and presently is appealing a sentence of 15 years in prison. The NHL took control of the team, though the Rigas family remained owners on paper. For a while, there were no interested buyers. After the two-year period of uncertainty, including rumors of relocating to another city or even straight out folding, the team was sold to a consortium led by Rochester, New York, billionaire and former New York gubernatorial candidate Tom Golisano and former Sabres president Larry Quinn, whose bid included no government funding. Golisano was introduced as team owner on March 19, 2003.

With the 2002–03 season having started under NHL control, general manager Darcy Regier could make only minimal moves. However, with the consultations of impending new ownership, the team began their rebuilding process around the March 2003 trade deadline by clearing out veteran players. The first to go was winger Rob Ray, who was sent to the Ottawa Senators. The team then sent center and team captain Stu Barnes to the Dallas Stars in exchange for young winger Michael Ryan and a draft pick.

A third deal sent center Chris Gratton to the Phoenix Coyotes with a draft pick for Daniel Briere and a draft pick, adding a player who would play a key role in the Sabres' resurgence in later years. The 2003–04 season saw the team emerge from its financial struggles and, though the Sabres narrowly missed the playoffs, the development of prominent young players. Although the 2004–05 NHL season was canceled due to a labor dispute, the league and the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) were able to agree on a new collective bargaining agreement in the summer of 2005, thus enabling NHL hockey to return for the 2005–06 season.

 
Lindy Ruff was awarded the Jack Adams Award in 2006. He was the second Sabres coach to win the award.

On January 19, 2005, the Sabres lost their main cable television broadcaster, as the Empire Sports Network (which had been on the air since 1991) ceased operations in a cost-cutting move during the Adelphia scandal and reorganization. (Like the Sabres, Empire had been owned by Adelphia prior to the NHL's seizure of the franchise.) Adelphia sold their rights to Sabres telecasts and for the 2005–06 campaign Madison Square Garden Network (MSG), a New York City-based channel which broadcasts New York Rangers, New York Islanders and New Jersey Devils games, took over the rights to broadcast Sabres games to television viewers in western New York, with the Sabres controlling all aspects of the broadcast. The agreement was later extended through 2017, then again through 2027.

In 2005–06, the Sabres took off, finishing with their best record in over 20 years and clinching their first playoff berth since the 2000–01 season. The team finished the regular season with 52 wins, surpassing the 50-win mark for the first time in franchise history. They also finished with 110 points, their first 100-point season in 23 years and tied the 1979–80 club for the second-best point total in franchise history. The Sabres tied the Ottawa Senators and Carolina Hurricanes for the most wins in the Eastern Conference. They finished with the fifth-best record in the NHL, behind Detroit, Ottawa, Dallas and Carolina.

Buffalo defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in the first round of the 2006 playoffs in six games and top-seeded Ottawa in five games. The Sabres advanced to play Carolina in their first Eastern Conference Final since 1999. However, injuries began to mount. They were forced to play without four of their top defensemen (Teppo Numminen, Dmitri Kalinin, Jay McKee and Henrik Tallinder) and their top powerplay scorer (Tim Connolly) for much of the series. Despite this, the Sabres forced the series to seven games before falling to the eventual Stanley Cup champions Carolina. The Sabres' impressive season was recognized on June 22, 2006, at the NHL Awards Ceremony when Lindy Ruff edged Hurricanes coach Peter Laviolette to win the Jack Adams Award as Coach of the Year in the closest vote in the award's history. Ruff was the second Sabres coach to win the award.

Return to blue and gold (2006–2010)

 
Thomas Vanek was re-signed in 2007 after the Edmonton Oilers offered him a seven-year offer sheet.

The Sabres started the 2006–07 season 10–0, setting a new franchise record for consecutive wins to start a season, and becoming just the second team in NHL history (after the 1993–94 Toronto Maple Leafs) to open a season with a ten-game winning streak. They also set a new NHL record for consecutive road wins to start a season (eight), which was extended to ten games (tying the team record for consecutive road wins) with a 7–4 win over the Carolina Hurricanes on November 13, 2006. The team reached the 50-win plateau for the second time in franchise history. The Sabres won the presidents' Trophy for the first time in franchise history, giving them the home-ice advantage for their entire run in the 2007 playoffs. They also tied the 1974–75 team's franchise record for points in a season. The team defeated the New York Islanders and the New York Rangers to reach their second consecutive Eastern Conference Finals. However, on May 19, they were eliminated by the Ottawa Senators after five games.

In the April 9, 2007, issue of ESPN the Magazine, the team ranked first of 122 major professional sports franchises in North America. The Sabres were cited for their player accessibility, low ticket prices and exciting brand of hockey.[15]

Post-Briere–Drury era

On July 1, 2007, the Sabres lost both co-captains, with Daniel Briere going to the Philadelphia Flyers and Chris Drury going to the New York Rangers as free agents. The team also nearly lost Thomas Vanek to the Edmonton Oilers, which offered him a seven-year, $50 million offer sheet, but the Sabres matched the offer on July 6. After these events, the team changed its policy of not negotiating contracts during the regular season. Long-time Sabres broadcast color commentator Jim Lorentz announced his retirement during the preseason. Hockey Night in Canada's Harry Neale took over the position in October 2007.

 
In 2008 the Sabres hosted the Pittsburgh Penguins at Ralph Wilson Stadium in the inaugural Winter Classic.

During the 2007–08 season, the Sabres hosted a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins on January 1, 2008, which was played outdoors at Ralph Wilson Stadium, home of the National Football League's Buffalo Bills.[16] Officially, the game was called the AMP Energy NHL Winter Classic, known colloquially as the "Ice Bowl" due to it taking place at the same time as college football bowl games. The Sabres lost 2–1 in a shootout. The Sabres failed to qualify for the 2008 playoffs and became only the third team in NHL history to go from finishing first overall in the regular season standings to finishing out of the playoffs the following year.

On June 10, the Sabres officially announced their new AHL affiliate, beginning in the 2008–09 season, would be the Portland Pirates from Portland, Maine. This ended their 29-year affiliation with the Rochester Americans. They signed with the Pirates for two seasons, with a parent club option for a third.[17] The Sabres entered the 2008 free agency period quietly, but on July 1, signed goaltender Patrick Lalime to a two-year contract. Three days later, the Sabres acquired Craig Rivet from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for a second-round draft pick in each of the next two drafts. The Sabres also extended the contracts of three players: Paul Gaustad (four years), Ryan Miller (five years) and Jason Pominville (five years). Miller was slated to become an unrestricted free agent following the upcoming season while Pominville was set to become a restricted free agent.

On October 8, the Sabres named defenseman Craig Rivet team captain, the first single full-time captain since Stu Barnes' term from 2001 to 2003. The team was also active at the trade deadline. First, they signed Tim Connolly to a two-year, $4.2 million extension, then acquired Mikael Tellqvist from the Phoenix Coyotes for a fourth-round pick in the 2010 draft. Dominic Moore came from the Toronto Maple Leafs for a second-round pick in the 2009 draft, then Buffalo received a second-round pick in the 2009 draft from the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for Ales Kotalik. On April 9, the Buffalo Sabres were eliminated from the playoffs.

 
Mikael Tellqvist was acquired by the Sabres on March 4, 2009. He was their backup goaltender for the remainder of the 2008–09 season.

General manager Darcy Regier announced on the first day of free agency for the following season the Sabres had signed unrestricted free agent defenseman Steve Montador to a two-year contract. They also signed free agent defenseman Joe DiPenta to a one-year contract on July 11, and extended contracts with three other players: Andrej Sekera to a multi-year deal, Clarke MacArthur to a one-year contract, and Mike Grier to a one-year contract. Grier, having played two seasons with the Sabres, returned after playing the last three with the San Jose Sharks.

At the beginning of the season, the Sabres announced the Buffalo Sabres Road Crew, which saw appearances by the Sabres' coaching staff, general manager Darcy Regier and broadcasting crew for charity. Four stops were scheduled throughout the season in Tampa, Florida, Washington, D.C., Raleigh, North Carolina, and Atlanta at established Buffalo fan clubs. Many native western New Yorkers live in those four cities; Sabres fans have been known to have large contingents in attendance, rivaling those of the home teams when playing in Raleigh and Tampa.[18]

After only playing two games with Buffalo that season, Daniel Paille was traded to the Boston Bruins on October 20, 2009, in exchange for a third-round and a conditional fourth-round draft selection. Paille's move to Boston marked the first ever trade of a player under contract between the two division rivals in their common 39 years in the NHL.[19] On January 1, the Sabres became the first team to win consecutive games when trailing by three or more goals since the Dallas Stars did it in 2005–06; Buffalo defeated the Atlanta Thrashers 4–3 in overtime. It was Buffalo's second straight win in a game it trailed 3–0, following a 4–3 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins.[20] On March 3, the day of the trade deadline, the Sabres made two deals. The first was with the Columbus Blue Jackets, which sent them Raffi Torres in exchange for Nathan Paetsch and a second-round draft pick. The Sabres' second and final deal sent Clarke MacArthur to the Atlanta Thrashers for third- and fourth-round draft picks. On March 27, the Sabres clinched their first playoff berth since 2006–07 with a 7–1 rout of the Tampa Bay Lightning. On April 6, the Sabres clinched the Northeast Division title by defeating the New York Rangers by a score of 5–2. On April 26, the third-seed Sabres were eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs by the sixth-seeded Boston Bruins in six games.

The 2010–11 roster did not have many significant changes; one of the most notable was the team's decision to waive center Tim Kennedy, a Buffalo native, to avoid paying the award he won in arbitration. Defensemen Henrik Tallinder and Toni Lydman were allowed to leave as free agents, while the team signed veterans Jordan Leopold and Shaone Morrisonn to replace them. Additionally, center Rob Niedermayer was added as a Stanley Cup-winning, veteran presence.

The Pegula era (2010–present)

 
On February 18, 2011, the sale of the Sabres franchise to Terrence Pegula was finalized.

On November 30, 2010, Ken Campbell of The Hockey News reported a story that billionaire Terry Pegula had signed a letter of intent to purchase the Sabres for US$150 million. Pegula was the founder, president and CEO of East Resources, one of the largest privately held companies in the United States before he sold the company.[21] After the report was released, Sabres managing partner Larry Quinn claimed it was "untrue" but refused further comment.[22] The $150 million was later determined to be an undervalued amount, as Forbes magazine had valued the team at just under $170 million in 2010. In December, Pegula officially expressed interest in buying the Sabres for $170 million and submitted a letter of intent to the NHL. In January, Golisano reportedly issued a counteroffer with an asking price of US$175 million.[23] Pegula and Golisano reached an agreement to sell the team on January 29, 2011, with Pegula purchasing the team for $189 million ($175 million with $14 million in debt included)[24][25] with the Sabres and Golisano officially making an announcement in a press conference on February 3, 2011.[26] NHL owners approved the sale on February 18.[27]

In the conference, it was stated that an unnamed bidder submitted a much higher bid than Pegula's, but made the bid contingent upon moving the team.[28] The description is consistent with that of Jim Balsillie, who has made public his efforts to move a team to Hamilton, Ontario, a move the Sabres have actively opposed. Terry Pegula named former Pittsburgh Penguins executive Ted Black to be team president.[29] Pegula was introduced as the Sabres' owner in a public ceremony at HSBC Arena on February 23, accompanied by what would be the final appearance of all three members of The French Connection before Rick Martin's death three weeks later. Around the 2010–11 trade deadline, the team attempted to trade Craig Rivet, but was unsuccessful. After initially clearing waivers, Rivet entered re-entry waivers and was claimed by the Columbus Blue Jackets.[30] Late on February 27, the team acquired Brad Boyes from the St. Louis Blues in exchange for a second-round draft pick.[31] This was the Sabres' sole trade of the deadline. After Pegula's official takeover of the team, the Sabres finished the regular season 16–4–4, never losing two consecutive games in that span, and landed the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference.[32] Pegula's approach was credited by players, fans and the public with bringing new energy to the team, sparking a run to the playoffs that seemed improbable only months earlier. On April 8, the Sabres clinched a playoff berth for the second consecutive season, defeating the Philadelphia Flyers 4–3 in overtime. The Sabres clinched the seventh seed and faced Philadelphia in the first round. The Sabres had a three games to two lead but lost the series in seven games.

Playoff drought record

The Sabres began the 2011–12 season as part of the NHL premiere series for the first time, playing games in Finland and Germany. The team was particularly well-received during a game against Adler Mannheim in Mannheim, the hometown of Sabres forward Jochen Hecht; a contingent of 65 Adler fans traveled from Germany to Buffalo in February 2012 to witness a Sabres game against the Boston Bruins.[33] Prior to the first game, Lindy Ruff named Jason Pominville the Sabres' 13th full-time captain in team history.[34] The Sabres began the season relatively strong but collapsed after a Boston Bruins game in which Bruins forward Milan Lucic hit and injured goaltender Ryan Miller; the subsequent months saw the Sabres collapse to last place in the Eastern Conference. Despite a two-month rally that began in February along with the emergence of rookie forward Marcus Foligno, the Sabres lost the last two games of the regular season and fell three points short of a playoff spot.

 
Jason Pominville was named the 13th Sabres team captain before the start of the 2011–12 season.

The 2012–13 NHL lockout eliminated the first part of the 2012–13 season, which ultimately began with a scheduled 48 games.[35] After a 6–10–1 start to the season, the contract of long-time head coach Lindy Ruff was terminated by general manager Darcy Regier on February 20, 2013, ending 16 seasons as head coach. Ruff was replaced by Ron Rolston first on an interim basis, then permanently after the season ended.[36] Due to the lockout-shortened season, the trade deadline was moved to April 3, 2013. In the days leading up to it, the Sabres were active in trades. On March 15, the Sabres' first trade sent T. J. Brennan to the Florida Panthers in exchange for a fifth-round pick (originally owned by the Los Angeles Kings) in the 2013 draft.[37] On March 30, the Sabres traded Jordan Leopold to the St. Louis Blues in exchange for a second-round pick and a conditional fifth-round pick in the 2013 draft.[38] On April 1, the Sabres traded Robyn Regehr to the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for two-second round draft choices (one in 2014 and the other in 2015).[39] The final trade came on the day of the trade deadline, April 3, where the Sabres sent Jason Pominville to the Minnesota Wild for Johan Larsson and Matt Hackett. The official announcement came after the 3 pm deadline. At the time of the official announcement, it was not clear if there were other parts of the deal as the trade was still pending NHL approval.[40] It was later revealed that draft picks were also involved in the deal: the Wild would receive a fourth-round pick in the 2014 draft, and the Sabres would receive a first-round pick in the 2013 draft and a second-round pick in the 2014 draft.

The following season, on November 13, 2013, the team dismissed general manager Darcy Regier and head coach Ron Rolston. Former Sabres head coach Ted Nolan was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season (he later signed a three-year contract extension) and Pat LaFontaine was named president of hockey operations. On January 9, 2014, Tim Murray was named general manager. On February 28, 2014, Murray made his first major trade, sending star goaltender Ryan Miller and Captain Steve Ott to the St. Louis Blues in exchange for goaltender Jaroslav Halak, forwards Chris Stewart and William Carrier and two draft picks. After just over three months as president of hockey operations, Pat LaFontaine resigned from the Sabres to return to his previous position with the NHL on March 1, 2014.[41] Among highlights in the otherwise bad 2013–14 season included the "butt goal" in which a severely short-staffed Sabres won their December 23 contest against the Phoenix Coyotes when Coyotes goaltender Mike Smith backed into his own goal with the puck lodged in his pants,[42] and the lone NHL appearance of former Lancaster High School goaltender Ryan Vinz, who was working as a videographer in the Sabres organization, to suit up as a backup goaltender in the wake of the Ryan Miller trade. The Sabres finished the 2013–14 season last in the NHL and again missed the playoffs.

 
The Sabres selected Jack Eichel with the second overall pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft.

Despite winning two more games than the previous season, the 2014–15 season was much like the previous one, with the team sitting near the bottom of the standings the entire season, and finishing last in the NHL. On March 26, 2015, during a 4–3 overtime loss to the Arizona Coyotes, spectators at the game, ostensibly fans of the Sabres, cheered after a game-winning goal by Coyotes centre Sam Gagner. Said fans were more eager to see the team lose (the Sabres and Coyotes were 29th and 30th in the standings at the time) in the hopes that it would ensure the team would deliberately lose to finish in last place and guarantee a top-two pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft, which included two extremely highly touted prospects, Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel. These spectators' "embrace the tank" philosophy led to criticism from the media and Sabres players for how the fans reacted.[43] However, some praised the fans for how they reacted, saying that they "did the right thing".[44] The Sabres clinched last place (and therefore a top-two pick) with a loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets on April 10 (this was later confirmed to be a number-two pick after the team, for the second year in a row, lost the draft lottery); the team used the pick to select Eichel. Murray fired Nolan at the end of the season, citing a lack of chemistry and lukewarm relations between them.[45] On May 28, 2015, Dan Bylsma was hired as the 17th head coach in franchise history.

The hiring of Bylsma, the drafting of Eichel and 2014 second overall pick Sam Reinhart, the acquisition of star centerman Ryan O'Reilly in the offseason, and the rising performance of youngsters Zemgus Girgensons, Jake McCabe and Rasmus Ristolainen resulted in an improved season in 2015–16. Even though the Sabres again missed the playoffs for the fifth consecutive season, the team managed to finish just under .500 in points percentage while fans and critics have praised these rebuilding efforts by Sabres general manager Tim Murray.

In mid-2016, the team announced that its television broadcasts would be spun off to their own regional sports network, MSG Western New York. The new network continues to operate under the MSG banner but under Pegula Sports and Entertainment control and features additional programs centered around the Sabres and the Buffalo Bills, which the Pegulas purchased separately in 2014. The team failed to make significant progress, and in fact slightly regressed, in 2016–17, missing the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season, leading to the firings of both head coach Dan Bylsma and general manager Tim Murray on April 20, 2017.[46]

 
Phil Housley during the 2017–18 season. Housley was named the Sabres' head coach the preceding off-season. He would be fired following the 2018–19 season.

During the 2017 off-season, the Sabres hired two of their former players as head coach and general manager: Jason Botterill as general manager and Phil Housley as head coach.[47] Among the more notable roster changes for this season was the return of former scoring leader Jason Pominville to the team in a trade that brought him and defenseman Marco Scandella to Buffalo in exchange for sending forwards Tyler Ennis and Marcus Foligno to the Minnesota Wild.[48]

On January 1, 2018, the Sabres participated in the 2018 NHL Winter Classic, losing 3–2 in overtime to the New York Rangers.[49]

In the 2017–18 season, Buffalo finished in last place in the NHL for the third time in five seasons and won the draft lottery for the 2018 NHL Entry Draft for the first time since 1987, using the pick to select Rasmus Dahlin from Frölunda HC of the Swedish Hockey League.

On November 27, 2018, the Sabres became the first team in NHL history to lead the league in points after the first 25 games of the season after finishing last in the league the previous season.[50] The team won 10 games in a row for the first time since the 2006–07 season and tied the franchise record.[51] Jeff Skinner became the seventh player in franchise history to score 20 or more goals in less than 27 games, and only the second player to score 20 goals before December.[52] The team then collapsed and missed the playoffs, leading to Housley's firing at the end of the season.[53]

On March 21, 2019, it was announced that the Sabres would play the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2019 NHL Global Series at Ericsson Globe in Stockholm, Sweden.[54] Ralph Krueger was named the Sabres head coach in May 2019.

On June 16, 2020, Botterill was fired as general manager of the Sabres and replaced by Kevyn Adams.[55]

On March 17, 2021, in the midst on a twelve-game losing streak, head coach Ralph Krueger was fired.[56] Don Granato was named interim head coach. After continuing to lose games, on March 29, 2021, the Sabres tied the Pittsburgh Penguins' all-time NHL losing streak of 18 games from the 2003–04 season after blowing a 3–0 lead in the third period against the Philadelphia Flyers and subsequently losing in overtime; it is the longest losing streak since the shootout was introduced.[57] Granato was named the permanent head coach at the end of the season.[58]

In the 2021–22 season, The Sabres would once again missed the playoffs for the 11th consecutive year, an NHL record.

Team information

Logo and uniforms

The Sabres have had, for the most part, used a primary logo featuring a bison atop two crossed sabres in a blue circle with gold trim. This logo was first used from 1970 to 1996 and was restored in 2020 after the Sabres 50th anniversary season was complete.

Throughout their 26-year tenure at the Buffalo Auditorium, the Sabres have worn white uniforms with a blue and gold shoulder yoke and alternating gold, white and blue stripes. On the road they wore blue uniforms with gold stripes. In 1978 the primary logo was added on the shoulders.[59]

Upon moving to what is now KeyBank Center (formerly Marine Midland and HSBC Arena, later First Niagara Center) in 1996, the Sabres changed their logo and colors. Red, black and silver replaced blue and gold while the primary "bison head" logo was unveiled as the primary logo. Black road (later home) and white home (later road) uniforms were also released featuring a bull's head silhouette design in front and the "Sabre B" alternate logo on the shoulders.[59]

The first third jersey of the Buffalo Sabres was created in 2000. The primary color was Sabre red, with black and silver stripes on the sleeves. It also featured the word "Buffalo" written on a black stripe outlined by silver near the waist. The logo was a black circle with two sabres crossing each other (a nod to the original logo).[59]

On October 7, 2001, the Sabres wore a modified version of their white jerseys in a road game against the New York Rangers. The uniform replaced the "bison head" with the "NEW YORK" diagonal wordmark as a tribute to the state of New York in the wake of the September 11 attacks.[60]

On September 16, 2006, the Sabres unveiled new home and away jerseys featuring midnight blue, maize (gold), silver and white colors. Front chest numbers were also added. The new logo, a stylized bison, was widely reviled, drawing unfavorable comparisons to a banana slug (hence the nickname "Buffaslug").[61] Despite the criticism, five of the top ten player jerseys sold in the first two months of the 2006–07 season were Sabres "slug" designs.[62][63] Nevertheless, the Sabres brought back the classic blue jerseys as a third jersey, but continued to pair the look with the navy helmet and pants. When the Reebok Edge template was unveiled in 2007, the Sabres kept their "Buffaslug" uniforms, but the following season, they released a new third jersey featuring the classic look depicted in the navy, gold, silver and white colors.[64] The Sabres also wore the original white uniforms during the 2008 Winter Classic.[65]

The third jersey eventually became the primary home jersey on September 18, 2010, when the Sabres released a modern version of the classic 1970–1996 logo. A corresponding road white jersey was also released, along with a third jersey featuring an alternate throwback arrangement that pays homage to the AHL's Buffalo Bisons, complete with the team's 40th Anniversary insignia (essentially the original royal blue version of the current logo with the year "1970" inside).[66][67]

In 2013, the Sabres released a new third jersey, featuring a gold front and navy back design. The uniform only lasted two seasons, after which it was retired.[68]

The Sabres kept their uniforms largely intact when Adidas took over as its supplier, save for the removal of silver sections in the armpits. They were also the only remaining NHL team to sport uniform numbers in front; teams such as the Dallas Stars and San Jose Sharks briefly added numbers in front of their uniforms before removing them altogether.[69]

During the 2018 Winter Classic, the Sabres broke out white uniforms with the classic blue and gold shade, albeit with a different striping scheme from the original uniforms.[70]

The 2019–20 season marked the final season of the navy and gold look, as the Sabres announced the return to royal blue uniforms for the following season. Also, a 50th-anniversary white third jersey was used, featuring metallic gold elements on the logo and stripes.[71]

On August 11, 2020, the Sabres unveiled the uniforms for the upcoming season. The style is similar to the ones worn in the early days of the franchise.[1] Jersey numbers are no longer displayed on the front. The Sabres also released a "Reverse Retro" alternate uniform, bringing back the "crossed swords" alternate from 2000 to 2006 but recolored to the current royal, gold and white scheme.[72]

For the 2022 Heritage Classic, the Sabres again wore a variation of their classic uniforms, but without the blue shoulder yoke and with a cream base.[73]

On August 31, 2022, the Sabres announced that their black uniform used from 1995 to 2006 would become their new third jersey.[74] This same uniform also became the basis of their second "Reverse Retro" uniform, but recolored to the white, blue and gold scheme and featured white pants.[75]

Broadcasters

Current
Past
  • Brian Blessing, studio host (1995–2003)
  • Ted Darling, TV play-by-play (1970–91) and studio host (1992–93)
  • Dave Hodge, radio play-by-play (1970–71)
  • Rick Jeanneret, TV and radio play-by-play (1971–2022)
  • Jim Lorentz, color commentator (1981–2007)
  • Brad May, studio Analyst (2015–2017)
  • Josh Mora, studio host (2003–2004)
  • Harry Neale, color commentator (2007–2012) and Studio analyst (2012–2013)
  • Mike Robitaille, color commentator (1985-1992), TV studio analyst (1989–2014)
  • Howard Simon, radio and TV analyst (1986–2004)
  • Kevin Sylvester, fill-in play by play, studio host (2005–16)
  • Pete Weber, radio play-by-play (1994–96)

National anthems

The Canadian and U.S. national anthems are sung before every Sabres home game, regardless if the visiting team is Canadian or American, because Buffalo is adjacent to the Canadian border and many spectators come from Canada.[76] Doug Allen sang the Canadian and US national anthems at most home games (except in cases where there is a conflict with his charitable work for the Wesleyan Church)[77] until resigning in 2021 because of his refusal to take a COVID-19 vaccine.[78] Curtis Cook is the arena's in-game organist.[79] During Tom Golisano's ownership, the team occasionally used the services of singer Ronan Tynan, who sang "God Bless America" while Allen performed the Canadian anthem (in such cases, the U.S. anthem was not performed). When Allen was unavailable, Kevin Kennedy (the regular anthem singer for the Buffalo Bandits) is the usual fill-in; on rare occasions since the Pegulas took over, Black River Entertainment personalities have performed the anthems.

In-game hosting

Rich Gaenzler, morning host at WGRF, took over as in-game host beginning in 2018[80][81] before he was fired in 2021 over an unrelated dispute pertaining to his WGRF show, which was canceled at the same time. WBFO personality Jay Moran is the current public address announcer; he succeeded Milt Ellis in the position.[81]

In November 2021, the Sabres added an official team dog, named Rick, a Newfoundland puppy trained as a service animal.[82] Nick was graduated to daily service and succeeded by Nikki, a golden retriever puppy.[83]

Minor league affiliates

The Sabres are presently affiliated with two minor league teams, the Rochester Americans of the American Hockey League, and the Cincinnati Cyclones of the ECHL. The Americans play at the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester, New York. Founded in 1956, the Americans were previously the Sabres AHL affiliate from the 1979–80 season to the 2007–08 season. During the original Sabres affiliation, the Americans won three Calder Cup championships and finished as runners-up another six times. They finished out of the playoffs only five times in 28 years. The Sabres became re-affiliated with the Americans starting with the 2011–12 season when after buying the Sabres, Pegula purchased the Americans from former owner Curt Styres.[84][85]

The Cincinnati Cyclones are based in Cincinnati, Ohio and have been the Sabres ECHL affiliate since the 2017–18 season, after their previous affiliate, the Elmira Jackals, folded. Unlike the Americans, the Cyclones are not owned by Pegula but are instead owned by Nederlander Entertainment. The Sabres previously owned an AHL affiliate in Cincinnati with the Cincinnati Swords in the 1970s.


Season-by-season record

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Sabres. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Buffalo Sabres seasons

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, OTL = Overtime Losses/SOL = Shootout Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
2017–18 82 25 45 12 62 199 280 8th, Atlantic Did not qualify
2018–19 82 33 39 10 76 226 271 6th, Atlantic Did not qualify
2019–20 69 30 31 8 68 195 217 6th, Atlantic Did not qualify
2020–21 56 15 34 7 37 138 199 8th, East Did not qualify
2021–22 82 32 39 11 75 232 290 5th, Atlantic Did not qualify

Players and personnel

Current roster

Updated March 13, 2023[86][87]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
41   Craig Anderson G L 41 2021 Park Ridge, Illinois
78   Jacob Bryson D L 25 2017 London, Ontario
38   Kale Clague D L 24 2022 Regina, Saskatchewan
31   Eric Comrie   G L 27 2022 Edmonton, Alberta
24   Dylan Cozens C R 22 2019 Whitehorse, Yukon
26   Rasmus Dahlin (A) D L 22 2018 Trollhattan, Sweden
28   Zemgus Girgensons (A) C L 29 2012 Riga, Latvia
12   Jordan Greenway LW L 26 2023 Canton, New York
29   Vinnie Hinostroza RW R 28 2021 Melrose Park, Illinois
10   Henri Jokiharju D R 23 2019 Oulu, Finland
17   Tyson Jost C L 25 2022 St. Albert, Alberta
19   Peyton Krebs C L 22 2021 Okotoks, Alberta
1   Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen G L 24 2017 Espoo, Finland
46   Ilya Lyubushkin D R 28 2022 Moscow, Russia
37   Casey Mittelstadt C L 24 2017 Eden Prairie, Minnesota
21   Kyle Okposo (C) RW R 34 2016 Saint Paul, Minnesota
71   Victor Olofsson LW L 27 2014 Ornskoldsvik, Sweden
77   JJ Peterka LW L 21 2020 Munich, Germany
25   Owen Power D L 20 2021 Mississauga, Ontario
22   Jack Quinn RW R 21 2020 Ottawa, Ontario
23   Mattias Samuelsson   D L 23 2018 Voorhees, New Jersey
53   Jeff Skinner LW L 30 2018 Markham, Ontario
61   Riley Stillman D L 25 2023 Calgary, Alberta
72   Tage Thompson C R 25 2018 Phoenix, Arizona
89   Alex Tuch RW R 26 2021 Syracuse, New York


Team captains

Front office

Kevyn Adams, who previously played in the NHL and served as Senior Vice President of Business Administration for the Sabres, was named the team's general manager on June 16, 2020.[88] Kim Pegula, as chief operating officer of Pegula Sports and Entertainment, serves as team president.

Head coaches

The Sabres named Don Granato as interim head coach on March 17, 2021,[56] replacing Ralph Krueger who had been fired on the same day. The interim tag was removed at the end of the season.

Of the 18 head coaches the Sabres have used in their history, seven of them had previously played for the Sabres during their playing career: Floyd Smith, Bill Inglis, Jim Schoenfeld, Craig Ramsay, Rick Dudley, Lindy Ruff and Phil Housley. Two others, Dan Bylsma and Ted Nolan, had played in the Sabres' farm system.

Team and league honors

Hockey Hall of Famers

The Buffalo Sabres has an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame. Sabres inductees include 11 former players and four builders of the sport.[89] The four individuals recognized as builders by the Hall of Fame includes former general managers, head coaches, and owners. In addition to players and builders, three broadcasters for the Buffalo Sabres were also awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame, Ted Darling in 1994, Rick Jeanneret in 2012, and Harry Neale in 2013.[90][91]

Four sports writers from publications based in Buffalo, and St. Catharines, Ontario (which is within Buffalo's media territory), were also awarded the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame. Recipients of the award include Charlie Barton (Buffalo Courier-Express) in 1985, Dick Johnston (Buffalo News) in 1986, Jack Gatecliff (St. Catharines Standard) in 1995, and Jim Kelley (Buffalo News) in 2004.[89][92]

Buffalo Sabres Hockey Hall of Fame inductees
Affiliation with inductees based on team acknowledgement
Hall of Fame players[89]
Dave Andreychuk
Dale Hawerchuk
Dick Duff
Tim Horton
Grant Fuhr
Phil Housley
Clark Gillies
Pat LaFontaine
Doug Gilmour
Gilbert Perreault
Dominik Hasek
Hall of Fame builders[89]
Scotty Bowman
Punch Imlach
Seymour H. Knox III
Roger Neilson

Retired numbers

Buffalo Sabres retired numbers
No. Player Position Career Number retirement
2 Tim Horton D 1972–1974 January 5, 1996
7 Rick Martin LW 1971–1981 November 15, 1995 1
11 Gilbert Perreault C 1970–1987 October 17, 1990 1
14 Rene Robert RW 1972–1979 November 15, 1995 1
16 Pat LaFontaine C 1991–1997 March 3, 2006
18 Danny Gare RW 1974–1981 November 22, 2005
30 Ryan Miller G 2002–2014 January 19, 2023
39 Dominik Hasek G 1992–2001 January 13, 2015
  • 1 When the No. 14 of Robert and the No. 7 of Martin were retired, Gilbert Perreault was present, as the entire "French Connection" line was given retirement together. Perreault's No. 11 was lowered and then raised back in the center under the French Connection banner, as shown above.
  • SHK III and NRK (team founders Seymour H. Knox III and Northrup R. Knox. Two banners bearing their initials and the Sabres blue and gold reside in the KeyBank Center's rafters.)
  • RJ (longtime play-by-play announcer Rick Jeanneret. A banner bearing his initials was raised on April 1, 2022.)
  • Although Alexander Mogilny's number 89 is not officially retired by the team, it has only been issued once since his departure following the 1995 season, to Alex Tuch in 2021.[93] Cory Conacher switched to 88 expressly out of deference to Mogilny in 2014.[94] Likewise, Ryan Miller, who traditionally wears 39, wore 30 during his time with the Sabres out of deference to Hasek, long before 39 was announced to be retired.[95] Miller's number 30 would also eventually be retired on January 19, 2023.
  • The NHL retired Wayne Gretzky's No. 99 for all its member teams at the 2000 NHL All-Star Game.[96]

Buffalo Sabres Hall of Fame

Scoring leaders

Regular season scoring leaders

 
Recording 552 regular-season points and 39 playoff points, Rene Robert is the sixth-highest all-time regular-season points leader, and the fifth-highest all-time playoff points leader with the Sabres.

These are the top-ten-point-scorers in franchise regular season history.[97] Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

  •  *  – current Sabres player
Points
Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G
Gilbert Perreault C 1,191 512 814 1,326 1.11
Dave Andreychuk LW 837 368 436 804 .96
Rick Martin LW 681 382 313 695 1.02
Craig Ramsay LW 1,070 252 420 672 .63
Phil Housley D 608 178 380 558 .92
Rene Robert RW 524 222 330 552 1.05
Don Luce C 766 216 310 526 .69
Jason Pominville RW 733 217 304 521 .71
Mike Foligno RW 664 247 264 511 .77
Danny Gare RW 503 267 233 500 .99
Goals
Player Pos G
Gilbert Perreault C 512
Rick Martin LW 382
Dave Andreychuk LW 368
Danny Gare RW 267
Thomas Vanek LW 254
Craig Ramsay LW 252
Mike Foligno RW 247
Miroslav Satan RW 224
Rene Robert RW 222
Jason Pominville RW 217
Assists
Player Pos A
Gilbert Perreault C 814
Dave Andreychuk LW 436
Craig Ramsay LW 420
Phil Housley D 380
Rene Robert RW 330
Rick Martin LW 313
Don Luce C 310
Jason Pominville RW 304
Dale Hawerchuk C 275
Derek Roy C 266

Franchise single-season records

  • Most goals: Alexander Mogilny, 76 (1992–93)
  • Most assists: Pat LaFontaine, 95 (1992–93)
  • Most points: Pat LaFontaine, 148 (1992–93)
  • Most penalty minutes: Rob Ray, 354 (1991–92)
  • Most goals, defenseman: Phil Housley, 31 (1983–84)
  • Most assists, defenseman: Phil Housley, 60 (1989–90)
  • Most points, defenseman: Phil Housley, 81 (1989–90)
  • Most goals, rookie: Rick Martin, 44 (1971–72)
  • Most assists, rookie: Phil Housley, 47 (1982–83)
  • Most points, rookie: Rick Martin, 74 (1971–72)
  • Most wins: Ryan Miller, 41 (2009–10)
  • Most shutouts: Dominik Hasek, 13 (1997–98)

NHL awards and trophies

References

Notes
  1. ^ The name was selected because, as public relations director Chuck Barr wrote in a press release, 'a sabre is renowned as a clean, sharp, decisive and penetrating weapon on offense, as well as a strong parrying weapon on defense.'[8]
  2. ^ The spelling sabre is otherwise rarely used in the United States (where it is saber) but, as with many words which can end either in -re or -er, it is spelled sabre in neighboring Canada.
Citations
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  2. ^ "Return to Royal". Sabres.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. August 11, 2020. Retrieved August 11, 2020.
  3. ^ "Sabres bring back beloved royal blue, charging buffalo uniforms". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. August 11, 2020. Retrieved October 6, 2020. What's old is new again in Buffalo with the Sabres' "Return to Royal." The team revealed its uniforms for the 2020–21 season on Tuesday and they're a throwback to the royal blue, gold and white of the original set with some modern updates.
  4. ^ Ferreras, Jesse (June 12, 2019). "The Canucks are now among the NHL's 2 oldest existing teams without a Stanley Cup". globalnews.ca. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  5. ^ Gretz, Adam (April 17, 2021). "Sabres officially miss playoffs for 10th consecutive season". NBC Sports. NBC Universal. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  6. ^ . The 40th Anniversary site of the Buffalo Sabres. Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
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  8. ^ . Buffalo Sabres. Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  9. ^ https://www.youtube.com/9GS4yb89OsI[dead link]
  10. ^ Kulyk, Andrew and Peter Farrell (November 1, 2017). "Hockey in Sin City". Artvoice. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
  11. ^ "All about new Manchester United signing Henrikh Mkhitaryan". Diario AS. July 6, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
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  30. ^ Vogl, John (February 28, 2011). "Rivet granted a fresh start – Sabres & NHL". The Buffalo News. Retrieved March 16, 2011.
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  32. ^ "Miller stops 34 as Sabres shutout Canadiens - Sportsnet.ca".
  33. ^ Kulyk, Andrew (February 9, 2012). . Artvoice. Archived from the original on March 23, 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2012.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on June 17, 2013. Retrieved October 6, 2011.
  35. ^ Allen, Kevin (January 12, 2013). "NHL schedule released, features 48 games in 99 days". USA Today Sports. Retrieved February 14, 2013.
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External links

  •   Media related to Buffalo Sabres at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • Buffalo Sabres Alumni Association

buffalo, sabres, template, team, buffalo, other, uses, sabre, disambiguation, 2022, seasonconferenceeasterndivisionatlanticfounded1970history1970, presenthome, arenakeybank, centercitybuffalo, yorkcolorsroyal, blue, gold, white, mediamsg, western, yorkwgr, 550. Template Team in Buffalo For other uses see Sabre disambiguation Buffalo Sabres2022 23 Buffalo Sabres seasonConferenceEasternDivisionAtlanticFounded1970HistoryBuffalo Sabres1970 presentHome arenaKeyBank CenterCityBuffalo New YorkColorsRoyal blue gold white 1 2 3 MediaMSG Western New YorkWGR 550Sabres Hockey NetworkOwner s Terry PegulaGeneral managerKevyn AdamsHead coachDon GranatoCaptainKyle OkposoMinor league affiliatesRochester Americans AHL Cincinnati Cyclones ECHL Stanley Cups0Conference championships3 1974 75 1979 80 1998 99 Presidents Trophy1 2006 07 Division championships6 1974 75 1979 80 1980 81 1996 97 2006 07 2009 10 Official websitewww wbr nhl wbr com wbr sabresThe Buffalo Sabres are a professional ice hockey team based in Buffalo New York The Sabres compete in the National Hockey League NHL as a member of the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference The team was established in 1970 along with the Vancouver Canucks when the league expanded to 14 teams The Sabres have played their home games at KeyBank Center since 1996 having previously played at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium since their inception The Sabres are owned by Terry Pegula who purchased the club in 2011 from Tom Golisano The team has twice advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals losing to the Philadelphia Flyers in 1975 and to the Dallas Stars in 1999 The Sabres along with the Canucks are the oldest active NHL franchises to have never won the Stanley Cup 4 The Sabres have the longest active playoff drought in the NHL at eleven seasons which stands as an NHL record 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years and the French Connection 1970 1981 1 2 Adams Northeast Division rivalries 1981 1996 1 3 The black and red era 1996 2006 1 3 1 New owners and return to the Finals 1 3 2 Ownership turmoil and lockout 1 4 Return to blue and gold 2006 2010 1 4 1 Post Briere Drury era 1 5 The Pegula era 2010 present 1 5 1 Playoff drought record 2 Team information 2 1 Logo and uniforms 2 2 Broadcasters 3 National anthems 4 In game hosting 4 1 Minor league affiliates 5 Season by season record 6 Players and personnel 6 1 Current roster 6 2 Team captains 6 3 Front office 6 4 Head coaches 7 Team and league honors 7 1 Hockey Hall of Famers 7 2 Retired numbers 7 3 Buffalo Sabres Hall of Fame 7 4 Scoring leaders 7 4 1 Regular season scoring leaders 7 5 Franchise single season records 7 6 NHL awards and trophies 8 References 9 External linksHistoryEarly years and the French Connection 1970 1981 The Sabres along with the Vancouver Canucks joined the NHL in the 1970 71 season Their first owners were Seymour H Knox III and Northrup Knox scions of a family long prominent in Western New York and grandsons of the co founders of the Woolworth s variety store chain along with Robert O Swados a Buffalo attorney On the team s inaugural board of directors were Robert E Rich Jr later the owner of the Buffalo Bisons minor league baseball team and George W Strawbridge Jr an heir to the Campbell Soup Company fortune Buffalo had a history of professional hockey immediately prior to the Sabres establishment the Buffalo Bisons were a pillar of the American Hockey League AHL having existed since 1940 and before that another Bisons hockey team played from 1928 to 1936 winning the Calder Cup in their final season 6 Wanting a name other than bison a generic stock name used by Buffalo sports teams for decades the Knoxes commissioned a name the team contest With names like Mugwumps Buzzing Bees and Flying Zeppelins being entered 7 the winning choice Sabres was chosen because Seymour Knox felt a sabre a weapon carried by a leader could be effective on offense and defense A B The Knoxes tried twice before to get an NHL team first when the NHL expanded in 1967 and again when they attempted to purchase the Oakland Seals with the intent of moving them to Buffalo Their first attempt was thwarted when Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney persuaded his horse racing friends James and Bruce Norris to select Pittsburgh over Buffalo 9 while the second attempt was due to the NHL not wanting an expansion market to give up on a team so soon nor isolate the Los Angeles Kings the only NHL team other than the Seals west of St Louis at the time from the rest of the NHL entirely At the time of their creation the Sabres exercised their option to create their own AHL farm team the Cincinnati Swords Former Toronto Maple Leafs general manager and head coach Punch Imlach was hired in the same capacity with the Sabres The year the Sabres debuted 1970 was an important year for major league sports in Buffalo In addition to the Sabres debut the Buffalo Bills officially joined the National Football League and the National Basketball Association s Buffalo Braves also began to play sharing Memorial Auditorium with the Sabres The city of Buffalo went from having no teams in the established major professional sports leagues to three in one off season a situation that proved to be unsustainable Between the Braves and the Sabres the Sabres would prove to be by far the more successful of the two Paul Snyder the nouveau riche Braves owner publicly feuded with the old money Knoxes and the local college basketball scene eventually losing those feuds and being forced to sell his team in 1976 Subsequent owners of the Braves in a series of convoluted transactions tied to the ABA NBA merger moved the team out of Buffalo When the Sabres debuted as an expansion team they took the ice to Aram Khachaturian s Armenian war dance Sabre Dance 10 The music has been associated with the team as an unofficial anthem ever since 11 It is often played between periods and after goals The consensus was that the first pick in the 1970 NHL Amateur Draft would be junior phenomenon Gilbert Perreault Either the Sabres or the Canucks would get the first pick to be determined with the spin of a wheel of fortune Perreault was available to the Sabres and Canucks as this was the first year the Montreal Canadiens did not have a priority right to draft Quebec born junior players The Canucks were allocated numbers 1 10 on the wheel while the Sabres had 11 20 When league president Clarence Campbell spun the wheel he initially thought the pointer landed on one While Campbell was congratulating the Vancouver delegation Imlach asked Campbell to check again As it turned out the pointer was on 11 effectively handing Perreault to the Sabres 12 Perreault scored 38 goals in his rookie season of 1970 71 at the time a record for most goals scored by a NHL rookie and he received the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL s rookie of the year Despite Perreault s play the Sabres finished well out of playoff contention A statue of the French Connection line stands outside KeyBank Center Consisting of Gilbert Perreault Rick Martin and Rene Robert they played together from 1972 to 1979 In the team s second season 1971 72 rookie Rick Martin drafted fifth overall by Buffalo in 1971 and Rene Robert acquired in a late season trade from the Pittsburgh Penguins joined Perreault and would become one of the league s top forward lines in the 1970s Martin broke Perreault s record at once with 44 rookie goals They were nicknamed The French Connection after the movie of the same name and in homage to their French Canadian roots The Sabres made the playoffs for the first time in 1972 73 just the team s third year in the league but lost in the quarterfinals in six games to the eventual Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens After a subpar year in 1974 that saw them miss the playoffs as well as aging defenseman Tim Horton s death in a DUI induced car accident the Sabres tied for the best record in the NHL in the 1974 75 regular season Buffalo advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in team history to play against the rough Philadelphia Flyers who had been recently nicknamed the Broad Street Bullies a series which included the legendary Fog Game Game 3 of the series Due to unusual heat in Buffalo in May 1975 and the lack of air conditioning in the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium parts of the game were played in heavy fog that made players officials and the puck invisible to many spectators During a face off and through the fog Sabres center Jim Lorentz spotted a bat flying across the rink swung at it with his stick killing it It was the only time that any player killed an animal during an NHL game The Sabres won that game thanks to Rene Robert s goal in overtime However Philadelphia would wind up taking the Stanley Cup in six games winning the series 4 2 The French Connection joined by 50 goal scorer Danny Gare continued to score prolifically for the Sabres in 1975 76 but the team lost in the quarterfinals to the New York Islanders The Sabres had success through the late 1970s behind Gare and the French Connection Perreault Martin and Robert but they were unable to return to the Finals despite a Wales Conference championship in 1980 and being the first team to beat the Soviet Olympic Team when they toured the United States The French Connection era ended with Robert s trade to the Colorado Rockies in 1979 and Martin s trade to the Los Angeles Kings in 1981 by which time Martin s career was essentially finished as the result of a devastating knee injury in 1980 All three players have had their sweater numbers 11 7 and 14 respectively retired and a statue erected in their honor at KeyBank Center in 2012 Adams Northeast Division rivalries 1981 1996 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1981 82 the NHL realigned its conferences and adopted an intra divisional playoff format for the first two rounds It was the beginning of an era in which the Sabres would finish in the middle of the Adams Division standings with regularity and then face the near certainty of having to get past either the Boston Bruins or Canadiens to make it to the conference finals Aside from first round victories over Montreal in 1982 83 and Boston in 1992 93 the era saw the Sabres lose to division rivals Boston the Quebec Nordiques and Montreal in the Adams Division semi finals first round a combined eight times and miss the playoffs altogether in 1985 86 and 1986 87 only third and fourth times out of the playoffs in franchise history Perrault reached the 500 goal mark in the 1985 86 season and retired after playing 20 games in 1986 87 17 years after joining the Sabres as their first draft pick The Sabres drafted Pierre Turgeon with the first pick in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft and he quickly made an impact with the team During his rookie season in 1987 88 he helped the Sabres reach the playoffs for the first time in three years He was joined in 1989 by Alexander Mogilny who with the help of Sabres officials became the first Soviet player to defect to the NHL and cleared the way for all other Russian players to follow In the 1989 90 season the Sabres would improve to finish with 98 points third best in the NHL but the playoff futility continued with a first round loss to Montreal The Sabres traded Turgeon to the New York Islanders in 1991 as part of a blockbuster seven player trade that brought Pat LaFontaine to Buffalo In 1992 93 goaltender Dominik Hasek joined the team in a trade from the Chicago Blackhawks In the 1993 playoffs the Sabres upset the Bruins in a four game sweep in the Adams Division semi finals their first playoff series victory in ten years Brad May s series winning goal in overtime of Game 4 in Buffalo was made famous by Rick Jeanneret s May Day call However the eventual Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens swept the Sabres in the division final with the Sabres losing all four games by a 4 3 score the last three games in overtime With the NHL adopting a conference playoff format for the 1993 94 season the Sabres faced the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference playoffs first round Despite Hasek winning a 1 0 quadruple overtime goaltending duel with the Devils Martin Brodeur in Game 6 the Sabres longest game ever which went into quadruple overtime Buffalo would lose the series in seven games Another first round playoff loss to the Philadelphia Flyers in the lockout shortened 1994 95 season was followed by a fifth place finish in the Northeast Division in 1995 96 as the team missed the playoffs for the first time in nine years It was the first season under head coach Ted Nolan and the last for the Sabres at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium Nolan brought an exciting brand of hockey to Buffalo During his coaching tenure Buffalo was referred to as the hardest working team in hockey 13 This season also featured the debut of walk on veteran Randy Burridge who earned a spot on the roster after he attended training camp on a try out basis He scored 25 goals that season and was second in team scoring to Pat LaFontaine Burridge also earned the Tim Horton Award for being the unsung hero and was voted team Most Valuable Player The final game in Memorial Auditorium was played on April 14 1996 a 4 1 victory over the Hartford Whalers Sabres principal owner Seymour Knox died a month later on May 22 1996 The black and red era 1996 2006 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ted Nolan and the Sabres rebounded in 1996 97 their first at Marine Midland Arena by winning their first division title in 16 years with Nolan winning the Jack Adams Award as the NHL s top coach Dominik Hasek winning both the Hart and Vezina Trophies the first goaltender to do so since Montreal s Jacques Plante in 1962 Michael Peca taking home the Frank J Selke Trophy as the best defensive forward in the NHL and general manager John Muckler honored as Executive of the Year However the regular season success was overshadowed by what had taken place during the playoffs Tensions between Nolan and Hasek had been high for most of the season After being scored upon in Game 3 of the first round against the Ottawa Senators Hasek left the game forcing backup Steve Shields to step in Hasek claimed he felt his knee pop and the team doctor pronounced him day to day The Buffalo News columnist Jim Kelley wrote a column that night for the next day s newspaper that detailed the day s events which irked Hasek After the Senators won Game 5 Hasek came out of the Sabres training room and attacked Kelley tearing his shirt Despite the fact Hasek issued an apology things went downhill after the incident Shields starred as the Sabres rallied to win the series against Ottawa But before the next series against the Philadelphia Flyers the NHL announced Hasek had been suspended for three games with the Sabres informing the NHL Hasek was healthy Hasek most likely would not have been suspended had he not been cleared to play Set to return in Game 4 with the Sabres down by three games to none Hasek told the Sabres coaching staff he felt a twinge in his knee and left the ice after the pre game skate Shields turned in another season saving performance as Buffalo staved off elimination with a win in overtime Again before Game 5 Hasek declared himself unfit to play and Buffalo lost 6 3 and the series Team president Larry Quinn fired general manager John Muckler who had a noted feud with Nolan Hasek who supported Muckler openly told reporters at the NHL Awards Ceremony he did not respect Nolan placing new general manager Darcy Regier in a tough position He offered Nolan just a one year contract for a reported 500 000 Nolan refused on the grounds his previous contract was for two years Regier then pulled the contract off the table and did not offer another one ending Nolan s tenure as Sabres coach Nolan was offered several jobs from the Tampa Bay Lightning and New York Islanders which he turned down and was out of the NHL until June 2006 when he was named coach of the Islanders Former Sabres captain Lindy Ruff was hired as head coach on July 21 1997 agreeing to a three year contract The Sabres organization after having their most successful season in nearly two decades had fired both the reigning NHL Executive of the Year Muckler and Coach of the Year Nolan New owners and return to the Finals During the 1997 98 season the Sabres which had lost 32 million over the previous three seasons and nearly missed payroll in December 1997 14 were sold by Northrop Knox to John Rigas owner of Adelphia Communications Shortly thereafter Quinn was dismissed and replaced by John Rigas son Timothy Rigas Behind Hasek left winger Miroslav Satan who led the team in scoring right winger Donald Audette center Michael Peca and several role playing journeymen including Matthew Barnaby the Sabres reached the Eastern Conference Finals that season but lost to the Washington Capitals in six games The Sabres playing a game during the 1998 99 season The Sabres were later crowned the Eastern Conference champions following the 1999 Stanley Cup playoffs In 1998 99 Miroslav Satan scored 40 goals The Sabres would add centers Stu Barnes from the Pittsburgh Penguins and Joe Juneau from the Capitals Michal Grosek had the best season of his career and the team finally returned to the Stanley Cup Finals this time against the Presidents Trophy winner the Dallas Stars In Game 6 Stars winger Brett Hull s triple overtime goal ended the series and the Stars were awarded the Cup In 1999 it was illegal to score a goal if an offensive player s skate entered the crease before the puck did However NHL officials maintained that Hull s two shots in the goal mouth constituted a single possession of the puck since the puck deflected off Hasek The rule was changed for the following season allowing players to be inside the goaltender s crease as long as they do not interfere with the goaltender The next year was a disappointing season The team struggled in the regular season due to injuries to Hasek as well as other tired and discouraged players Doug Gilmour was acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks at the trade deadline and sparked the Sabres to a playoff berth However Gilmour was stricken by stomach flu during the postseason and even Hasek s return could not prevent a first round playoff series loss to the Philadelphia Flyers Like the previous season there would be an officiating controversy In Game 2 Flyers left wing John LeClair put the puck in the net through a hole in the mesh While replays appeared to show the puck entering through the side of the net the goal was allowed to stand The Flyers would win the game 2 1 and go on to win the series four games to one Captain Michael Peca sat out 2000 01 due to a contract dispute and was later traded to the New York Islanders in June 2001 in exchange for Tim Connolly and Taylor Pyatt Even so the Sabres still defeated Philadelphia in six games in the first round of the playoffs with a resounding 8 0 victory in the series winning game In the second round they faced the underdog Pittsburgh Penguins led by rejuvenated superstar Mario Lemieux and captain Jaromir Jagr who had won his fifth Art Ross Trophy that season losing on a seventh game overtime goal scored by defenseman Darius Kasparaitis After lengthy and failed negotiations with their star goaltender the Sabres traded Hasek to the Detroit Red Wings in the summer of 2001 bringing a five year era of playoff success to a close Without Hasek and Peca the Sabres missed the 2002 playoffs Ownership turmoil and lockout In May 2002 John Rigas and his sons were indicted for bank wire and securities fraud for embezzling more than 2 billion from Adelphia Rigas was later convicted and presently is appealing a sentence of 15 years in prison The NHL took control of the team though the Rigas family remained owners on paper For a while there were no interested buyers After the two year period of uncertainty including rumors of relocating to another city or even straight out folding the team was sold to a consortium led by Rochester New York billionaire and former New York gubernatorial candidate Tom Golisano and former Sabres president Larry Quinn whose bid included no government funding Golisano was introduced as team owner on March 19 2003 With the 2002 03 season having started under NHL control general manager Darcy Regier could make only minimal moves However with the consultations of impending new ownership the team began their rebuilding process around the March 2003 trade deadline by clearing out veteran players The first to go was winger Rob Ray who was sent to the Ottawa Senators The team then sent center and team captain Stu Barnes to the Dallas Stars in exchange for young winger Michael Ryan and a draft pick A third deal sent center Chris Gratton to the Phoenix Coyotes with a draft pick for Daniel Briere and a draft pick adding a player who would play a key role in the Sabres resurgence in later years The 2003 04 season saw the team emerge from its financial struggles and though the Sabres narrowly missed the playoffs the development of prominent young players Although the 2004 05 NHL season was canceled due to a labor dispute the league and the National Hockey League Players Association NHLPA were able to agree on a new collective bargaining agreement in the summer of 2005 thus enabling NHL hockey to return for the 2005 06 season Lindy Ruff was awarded the Jack Adams Award in 2006 He was the second Sabres coach to win the award On January 19 2005 the Sabres lost their main cable television broadcaster as the Empire Sports Network which had been on the air since 1991 ceased operations in a cost cutting move during the Adelphia scandal and reorganization Like the Sabres Empire had been owned by Adelphia prior to the NHL s seizure of the franchise Adelphia sold their rights to Sabres telecasts and for the 2005 06 campaign Madison Square Garden Network MSG a New York City based channel which broadcasts New York Rangers New York Islanders and New Jersey Devils games took over the rights to broadcast Sabres games to television viewers in western New York with the Sabres controlling all aspects of the broadcast The agreement was later extended through 2017 then again through 2027 In 2005 06 the Sabres took off finishing with their best record in over 20 years and clinching their first playoff berth since the 2000 01 season The team finished the regular season with 52 wins surpassing the 50 win mark for the first time in franchise history They also finished with 110 points their first 100 point season in 23 years and tied the 1979 80 club for the second best point total in franchise history The Sabres tied the Ottawa Senators and Carolina Hurricanes for the most wins in the Eastern Conference They finished with the fifth best record in the NHL behind Detroit Ottawa Dallas and Carolina Buffalo defeated the Philadelphia Flyers in the first round of the 2006 playoffs in six games and top seeded Ottawa in five games The Sabres advanced to play Carolina in their first Eastern Conference Final since 1999 However injuries began to mount They were forced to play without four of their top defensemen Teppo Numminen Dmitri Kalinin Jay McKee and Henrik Tallinder and their top powerplay scorer Tim Connolly for much of the series Despite this the Sabres forced the series to seven games before falling to the eventual Stanley Cup champions Carolina The Sabres impressive season was recognized on June 22 2006 at the NHL Awards Ceremony when Lindy Ruff edged Hurricanes coach Peter Laviolette to win the Jack Adams Award as Coach of the Year in the closest vote in the award s history Ruff was the second Sabres coach to win the award Return to blue and gold 2006 2010 Thomas Vanek was re signed in 2007 after the Edmonton Oilers offered him a seven year offer sheet The Sabres started the 2006 07 season 10 0 setting a new franchise record for consecutive wins to start a season and becoming just the second team in NHL history after the 1993 94 Toronto Maple Leafs to open a season with a ten game winning streak They also set a new NHL record for consecutive road wins to start a season eight which was extended to ten games tying the team record for consecutive road wins with a 7 4 win over the Carolina Hurricanes on November 13 2006 The team reached the 50 win plateau for the second time in franchise history The Sabres won the presidents Trophy for the first time in franchise history giving them the home ice advantage for their entire run in the 2007 playoffs They also tied the 1974 75 team s franchise record for points in a season The team defeated the New York Islanders and the New York Rangers to reach their second consecutive Eastern Conference Finals However on May 19 they were eliminated by the Ottawa Senators after five games In the April 9 2007 issue of ESPN the Magazine the team ranked first of 122 major professional sports franchises in North America The Sabres were cited for their player accessibility low ticket prices and exciting brand of hockey 15 Post Briere Drury era On July 1 2007 the Sabres lost both co captains with Daniel Briere going to the Philadelphia Flyers and Chris Drury going to the New York Rangers as free agents The team also nearly lost Thomas Vanek to the Edmonton Oilers which offered him a seven year 50 million offer sheet but the Sabres matched the offer on July 6 After these events the team changed its policy of not negotiating contracts during the regular season Long time Sabres broadcast color commentator Jim Lorentz announced his retirement during the preseason Hockey Night in Canada s Harry Neale took over the position in October 2007 In 2008 the Sabres hosted the Pittsburgh Penguins at Ralph Wilson Stadium in the inaugural Winter Classic During the 2007 08 season the Sabres hosted a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins on January 1 2008 which was played outdoors at Ralph Wilson Stadium home of the National Football League s Buffalo Bills 16 Officially the game was called the AMP Energy NHL Winter Classic known colloquially as the Ice Bowl due to it taking place at the same time as college football bowl games The Sabres lost 2 1 in a shootout The Sabres failed to qualify for the 2008 playoffs and became only the third team in NHL history to go from finishing first overall in the regular season standings to finishing out of the playoffs the following year On June 10 the Sabres officially announced their new AHL affiliate beginning in the 2008 09 season would be the Portland Pirates from Portland Maine This ended their 29 year affiliation with the Rochester Americans They signed with the Pirates for two seasons with a parent club option for a third 17 The Sabres entered the 2008 free agency period quietly but on July 1 signed goaltender Patrick Lalime to a two year contract Three days later the Sabres acquired Craig Rivet from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for a second round draft pick in each of the next two drafts The Sabres also extended the contracts of three players Paul Gaustad four years Ryan Miller five years and Jason Pominville five years Miller was slated to become an unrestricted free agent following the upcoming season while Pominville was set to become a restricted free agent On October 8 the Sabres named defenseman Craig Rivet team captain the first single full time captain since Stu Barnes term from 2001 to 2003 The team was also active at the trade deadline First they signed Tim Connolly to a two year 4 2 million extension then acquired Mikael Tellqvist from the Phoenix Coyotes for a fourth round pick in the 2010 draft Dominic Moore came from the Toronto Maple Leafs for a second round pick in the 2009 draft then Buffalo received a second round pick in the 2009 draft from the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for Ales Kotalik On April 9 the Buffalo Sabres were eliminated from the playoffs Mikael Tellqvist was acquired by the Sabres on March 4 2009 He was their backup goaltender for the remainder of the 2008 09 season General manager Darcy Regier announced on the first day of free agency for the following season the Sabres had signed unrestricted free agent defenseman Steve Montador to a two year contract They also signed free agent defenseman Joe DiPenta to a one year contract on July 11 and extended contracts with three other players Andrej Sekera to a multi year deal Clarke MacArthur to a one year contract and Mike Grier to a one year contract Grier having played two seasons with the Sabres returned after playing the last three with the San Jose Sharks At the beginning of the season the Sabres announced the Buffalo Sabres Road Crew which saw appearances by the Sabres coaching staff general manager Darcy Regier and broadcasting crew for charity Four stops were scheduled throughout the season in Tampa Florida Washington D C Raleigh North Carolina and Atlanta at established Buffalo fan clubs Many native western New Yorkers live in those four cities Sabres fans have been known to have large contingents in attendance rivaling those of the home teams when playing in Raleigh and Tampa 18 After only playing two games with Buffalo that season Daniel Paille was traded to the Boston Bruins on October 20 2009 in exchange for a third round and a conditional fourth round draft selection Paille s move to Boston marked the first ever trade of a player under contract between the two division rivals in their common 39 years in the NHL 19 On January 1 the Sabres became the first team to win consecutive games when trailing by three or more goals since the Dallas Stars did it in 2005 06 Buffalo defeated the Atlanta Thrashers 4 3 in overtime It was Buffalo s second straight win in a game it trailed 3 0 following a 4 3 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins 20 On March 3 the day of the trade deadline the Sabres made two deals The first was with the Columbus Blue Jackets which sent them Raffi Torres in exchange for Nathan Paetsch and a second round draft pick The Sabres second and final deal sent Clarke MacArthur to the Atlanta Thrashers for third and fourth round draft picks On March 27 the Sabres clinched their first playoff berth since 2006 07 with a 7 1 rout of the Tampa Bay Lightning On April 6 the Sabres clinched the Northeast Division title by defeating the New York Rangers by a score of 5 2 On April 26 the third seed Sabres were eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs by the sixth seeded Boston Bruins in six games The 2010 11 roster did not have many significant changes one of the most notable was the team s decision to waive center Tim Kennedy a Buffalo native to avoid paying the award he won in arbitration Defensemen Henrik Tallinder and Toni Lydman were allowed to leave as free agents while the team signed veterans Jordan Leopold and Shaone Morrisonn to replace them Additionally center Rob Niedermayer was added as a Stanley Cup winning veteran presence The Pegula era 2010 present On February 18 2011 the sale of the Sabres franchise to Terrence Pegula was finalized On November 30 2010 Ken Campbell of The Hockey News reported a story that billionaire Terry Pegula had signed a letter of intent to purchase the Sabres for US 150 million Pegula was the founder president and CEO of East Resources one of the largest privately held companies in the United States before he sold the company 21 After the report was released Sabres managing partner Larry Quinn claimed it was untrue but refused further comment 22 The 150 million was later determined to be an undervalued amount as Forbes magazine had valued the team at just under 170 million in 2010 In December Pegula officially expressed interest in buying the Sabres for 170 million and submitted a letter of intent to the NHL In January Golisano reportedly issued a counteroffer with an asking price of US 175 million 23 Pegula and Golisano reached an agreement to sell the team on January 29 2011 with Pegula purchasing the team for 189 million 175 million with 14 million in debt included 24 25 with the Sabres and Golisano officially making an announcement in a press conference on February 3 2011 26 NHL owners approved the sale on February 18 27 In the conference it was stated that an unnamed bidder submitted a much higher bid than Pegula s but made the bid contingent upon moving the team 28 The description is consistent with that of Jim Balsillie who has made public his efforts to move a team to Hamilton Ontario a move the Sabres have actively opposed Terry Pegula named former Pittsburgh Penguins executive Ted Black to be team president 29 Pegula was introduced as the Sabres owner in a public ceremony at HSBC Arena on February 23 accompanied by what would be the final appearance of all three members of The French Connection before Rick Martin s death three weeks later Around the 2010 11 trade deadline the team attempted to trade Craig Rivet but was unsuccessful After initially clearing waivers Rivet entered re entry waivers and was claimed by the Columbus Blue Jackets 30 Late on February 27 the team acquired Brad Boyes from the St Louis Blues in exchange for a second round draft pick 31 This was the Sabres sole trade of the deadline After Pegula s official takeover of the team the Sabres finished the regular season 16 4 4 never losing two consecutive games in that span and landed the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference 32 Pegula s approach was credited by players fans and the public with bringing new energy to the team sparking a run to the playoffs that seemed improbable only months earlier On April 8 the Sabres clinched a playoff berth for the second consecutive season defeating the Philadelphia Flyers 4 3 in overtime The Sabres clinched the seventh seed and faced Philadelphia in the first round The Sabres had a three games to two lead but lost the series in seven games Playoff drought record The Sabres began the 2011 12 season as part of the NHL premiere series for the first time playing games in Finland and Germany The team was particularly well received during a game against Adler Mannheim in Mannheim the hometown of Sabres forward Jochen Hecht a contingent of 65 Adler fans traveled from Germany to Buffalo in February 2012 to witness a Sabres game against the Boston Bruins 33 Prior to the first game Lindy Ruff named Jason Pominville the Sabres 13th full time captain in team history 34 The Sabres began the season relatively strong but collapsed after a Boston Bruins game in which Bruins forward Milan Lucic hit and injured goaltender Ryan Miller the subsequent months saw the Sabres collapse to last place in the Eastern Conference Despite a two month rally that began in February along with the emergence of rookie forward Marcus Foligno the Sabres lost the last two games of the regular season and fell three points short of a playoff spot Jason Pominville was named the 13th Sabres team captain before the start of the 2011 12 season The 2012 13 NHL lockout eliminated the first part of the 2012 13 season which ultimately began with a scheduled 48 games 35 After a 6 10 1 start to the season the contract of long time head coach Lindy Ruff was terminated by general manager Darcy Regier on February 20 2013 ending 16 seasons as head coach Ruff was replaced by Ron Rolston first on an interim basis then permanently after the season ended 36 Due to the lockout shortened season the trade deadline was moved to April 3 2013 In the days leading up to it the Sabres were active in trades On March 15 the Sabres first trade sent T J Brennan to the Florida Panthers in exchange for a fifth round pick originally owned by the Los Angeles Kings in the 2013 draft 37 On March 30 the Sabres traded Jordan Leopold to the St Louis Blues in exchange for a second round pick and a conditional fifth round pick in the 2013 draft 38 On April 1 the Sabres traded Robyn Regehr to the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for two second round draft choices one in 2014 and the other in 2015 39 The final trade came on the day of the trade deadline April 3 where the Sabres sent Jason Pominville to the Minnesota Wild for Johan Larsson and Matt Hackett The official announcement came after the 3 pm deadline At the time of the official announcement it was not clear if there were other parts of the deal as the trade was still pending NHL approval 40 It was later revealed that draft picks were also involved in the deal the Wild would receive a fourth round pick in the 2014 draft and the Sabres would receive a first round pick in the 2013 draft and a second round pick in the 2014 draft The following season on November 13 2013 the team dismissed general manager Darcy Regier and head coach Ron Rolston Former Sabres head coach Ted Nolan was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season he later signed a three year contract extension and Pat LaFontaine was named president of hockey operations On January 9 2014 Tim Murray was named general manager On February 28 2014 Murray made his first major trade sending star goaltender Ryan Miller and Captain Steve Ott to the St Louis Blues in exchange for goaltender Jaroslav Halak forwards Chris Stewart and William Carrier and two draft picks After just over three months as president of hockey operations Pat LaFontaine resigned from the Sabres to return to his previous position with the NHL on March 1 2014 41 Among highlights in the otherwise bad 2013 14 season included the butt goal in which a severely short staffed Sabres won their December 23 contest against the Phoenix Coyotes when Coyotes goaltender Mike Smith backed into his own goal with the puck lodged in his pants 42 and the lone NHL appearance of former Lancaster High School goaltender Ryan Vinz who was working as a videographer in the Sabres organization to suit up as a backup goaltender in the wake of the Ryan Miller trade The Sabres finished the 2013 14 season last in the NHL and again missed the playoffs The Sabres selected Jack Eichel with the second overall pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft Despite winning two more games than the previous season the 2014 15 season was much like the previous one with the team sitting near the bottom of the standings the entire season and finishing last in the NHL On March 26 2015 during a 4 3 overtime loss to the Arizona Coyotes spectators at the game ostensibly fans of the Sabres cheered after a game winning goal by Coyotes centre Sam Gagner Said fans were more eager to see the team lose the Sabres and Coyotes were 29th and 30th in the standings at the time in the hopes that it would ensure the team would deliberately lose to finish in last place and guarantee a top two pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft which included two extremely highly touted prospects Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel These spectators embrace the tank philosophy led to criticism from the media and Sabres players for how the fans reacted 43 However some praised the fans for how they reacted saying that they did the right thing 44 The Sabres clinched last place and therefore a top two pick with a loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets on April 10 this was later confirmed to be a number two pick after the team for the second year in a row lost the draft lottery the team used the pick to select Eichel Murray fired Nolan at the end of the season citing a lack of chemistry and lukewarm relations between them 45 On May 28 2015 Dan Bylsma was hired as the 17th head coach in franchise history The hiring of Bylsma the drafting of Eichel and 2014 second overall pick Sam Reinhart the acquisition of star centerman Ryan O Reilly in the offseason and the rising performance of youngsters Zemgus Girgensons Jake McCabe and Rasmus Ristolainen resulted in an improved season in 2015 16 Even though the Sabres again missed the playoffs for the fifth consecutive season the team managed to finish just under 500 in points percentage while fans and critics have praised these rebuilding efforts by Sabres general manager Tim Murray In mid 2016 the team announced that its television broadcasts would be spun off to their own regional sports network MSG Western New York The new network continues to operate under the MSG banner but under Pegula Sports and Entertainment control and features additional programs centered around the Sabres and the Buffalo Bills which the Pegulas purchased separately in 2014 The team failed to make significant progress and in fact slightly regressed in 2016 17 missing the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season leading to the firings of both head coach Dan Bylsma and general manager Tim Murray on April 20 2017 46 Phil Housley during the 2017 18 season Housley was named the Sabres head coach the preceding off season He would be fired following the 2018 19 season During the 2017 off season the Sabres hired two of their former players as head coach and general manager Jason Botterill as general manager and Phil Housley as head coach 47 Among the more notable roster changes for this season was the return of former scoring leader Jason Pominville to the team in a trade that brought him and defenseman Marco Scandella to Buffalo in exchange for sending forwards Tyler Ennis and Marcus Foligno to the Minnesota Wild 48 On January 1 2018 the Sabres participated in the 2018 NHL Winter Classic losing 3 2 in overtime to the New York Rangers 49 In the 2017 18 season Buffalo finished in last place in the NHL for the third time in five seasons and won the draft lottery for the 2018 NHL Entry Draft for the first time since 1987 using the pick to select Rasmus Dahlin from Frolunda HC of the Swedish Hockey League On November 27 2018 the Sabres became the first team in NHL history to lead the league in points after the first 25 games of the season after finishing last in the league the previous season 50 The team won 10 games in a row for the first time since the 2006 07 season and tied the franchise record 51 Jeff Skinner became the seventh player in franchise history to score 20 or more goals in less than 27 games and only the second player to score 20 goals before December 52 The team then collapsed and missed the playoffs leading to Housley s firing at the end of the season 53 On March 21 2019 it was announced that the Sabres would play the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2019 NHL Global Series at Ericsson Globe in Stockholm Sweden 54 Ralph Krueger was named the Sabres head coach in May 2019 On June 16 2020 Botterill was fired as general manager of the Sabres and replaced by Kevyn Adams 55 On March 17 2021 in the midst on a twelve game losing streak head coach Ralph Krueger was fired 56 Don Granato was named interim head coach After continuing to lose games on March 29 2021 the Sabres tied the Pittsburgh Penguins all time NHL losing streak of 18 games from the 2003 04 season after blowing a 3 0 lead in the third period against the Philadelphia Flyers and subsequently losing in overtime it is the longest losing streak since the shootout was introduced 57 Granato was named the permanent head coach at the end of the season 58 In the 2021 22 season The Sabres would once again missed the playoffs for the 11th consecutive year an NHL record Team informationLogo and uniforms The Sabres have had for the most part used a primary logo featuring a bison atop two crossed sabres in a blue circle with gold trim This logo was first used from 1970 to 1996 and was restored in 2020 after the Sabres 50th anniversary season was complete Throughout their 26 year tenure at the Buffalo Auditorium the Sabres have worn white uniforms with a blue and gold shoulder yoke and alternating gold white and blue stripes On the road they wore blue uniforms with gold stripes In 1978 the primary logo was added on the shoulders 59 Upon moving to what is now KeyBank Center formerly Marine Midland and HSBC Arena later First Niagara Center in 1996 the Sabres changed their logo and colors Red black and silver replaced blue and gold while the primary bison head logo was unveiled as the primary logo Black road later home and white home later road uniforms were also released featuring a bull s head silhouette design in front and the Sabre B alternate logo on the shoulders 59 The first third jersey of the Buffalo Sabres was created in 2000 The primary color was Sabre red with black and silver stripes on the sleeves It also featured the word Buffalo written on a black stripe outlined by silver near the waist The logo was a black circle with two sabres crossing each other a nod to the original logo 59 On October 7 2001 the Sabres wore a modified version of their white jerseys in a road game against the New York Rangers The uniform replaced the bison head with the NEW YORK diagonal wordmark as a tribute to the state of New York in the wake of the September 11 attacks 60 On September 16 2006 the Sabres unveiled new home and away jerseys featuring midnight blue maize gold silver and white colors Front chest numbers were also added The new logo a stylized bison was widely reviled drawing unfavorable comparisons to a banana slug hence the nickname Buffaslug 61 Despite the criticism five of the top ten player jerseys sold in the first two months of the 2006 07 season were Sabres slug designs 62 63 Nevertheless the Sabres brought back the classic blue jerseys as a third jersey but continued to pair the look with the navy helmet and pants When the Reebok Edge template was unveiled in 2007 the Sabres kept their Buffaslug uniforms but the following season they released a new third jersey featuring the classic look depicted in the navy gold silver and white colors 64 The Sabres also wore the original white uniforms during the 2008 Winter Classic 65 The third jersey eventually became the primary home jersey on September 18 2010 when the Sabres released a modern version of the classic 1970 1996 logo A corresponding road white jersey was also released along with a third jersey featuring an alternate throwback arrangement that pays homage to the AHL s Buffalo Bisons complete with the team s 40th Anniversary insignia essentially the original royal blue version of the current logo with the year 1970 inside 66 67 In 2013 the Sabres released a new third jersey featuring a gold front and navy back design The uniform only lasted two seasons after which it was retired 68 The Sabres kept their uniforms largely intact when Adidas took over as its supplier save for the removal of silver sections in the armpits They were also the only remaining NHL team to sport uniform numbers in front teams such as the Dallas Stars and San Jose Sharks briefly added numbers in front of their uniforms before removing them altogether 69 During the 2018 Winter Classic the Sabres broke out white uniforms with the classic blue and gold shade albeit with a different striping scheme from the original uniforms 70 The 2019 20 season marked the final season of the navy and gold look as the Sabres announced the return to royal blue uniforms for the following season Also a 50th anniversary white third jersey was used featuring metallic gold elements on the logo and stripes 71 On August 11 2020 the Sabres unveiled the uniforms for the upcoming season The style is similar to the ones worn in the early days of the franchise 1 Jersey numbers are no longer displayed on the front The Sabres also released a Reverse Retro alternate uniform bringing back the crossed swords alternate from 2000 to 2006 but recolored to the current royal gold and white scheme 72 For the 2022 Heritage Classic the Sabres again wore a variation of their classic uniforms but without the blue shoulder yoke and with a cream base 73 On August 31 2022 the Sabres announced that their black uniform used from 1995 to 2006 would become their new third jersey 74 This same uniform also became the basis of their second Reverse Retro uniform but recolored to the white blue and gold scheme and featured white pants 75 Broadcasters Main article List of Buffalo Sabres broadcasters CurrentDan Dunleavy play by play and intermission interviewer Rob Ray color commentator Brian Duff studio host Martin Biron studio analyst Danny Gare fill in studio analyst PastBrian Blessing studio host 1995 2003 Ted Darling TV play by play 1970 91 and studio host 1992 93 Dave Hodge radio play by play 1970 71 Rick Jeanneret TV and radio play by play 1971 2022 Jim Lorentz color commentator 1981 2007 Brad May studio Analyst 2015 2017 Josh Mora studio host 2003 2004 Harry Neale color commentator 2007 2012 and Studio analyst 2012 2013 Mike Robitaille color commentator 1985 1992 TV studio analyst 1989 2014 Howard Simon radio and TV analyst 1986 2004 Kevin Sylvester fill in play by play studio host 2005 16 Pete Weber radio play by play 1994 96 National anthemsThe Canadian and U S national anthems are sung before every Sabres home game regardless if the visiting team is Canadian or American because Buffalo is adjacent to the Canadian border and many spectators come from Canada 76 Doug Allen sang the Canadian and US national anthems at most home games except in cases where there is a conflict with his charitable work for the Wesleyan Church 77 until resigning in 2021 because of his refusal to take a COVID 19 vaccine 78 Curtis Cook is the arena s in game organist 79 During Tom Golisano s ownership the team occasionally used the services of singer Ronan Tynan who sang God Bless America while Allen performed the Canadian anthem in such cases the U S anthem was not performed When Allen was unavailable Kevin Kennedy the regular anthem singer for the Buffalo Bandits is the usual fill in on rare occasions since the Pegulas took over Black River Entertainment personalities have performed the anthems In game hostingRich Gaenzler morning host at WGRF took over as in game host beginning in 2018 80 81 before he was fired in 2021 over an unrelated dispute pertaining to his WGRF show which was canceled at the same time WBFO personality Jay Moran is the current public address announcer he succeeded Milt Ellis in the position 81 In November 2021 the Sabres added an official team dog named Rick a Newfoundland puppy trained as a service animal 82 Nick was graduated to daily service and succeeded by Nikki a golden retriever puppy 83 Minor league affiliates The Sabres are presently affiliated with two minor league teams the Rochester Americans of the American Hockey League and the Cincinnati Cyclones of the ECHL The Americans play at the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester New York Founded in 1956 the Americans were previously the Sabres AHL affiliate from the 1979 80 season to the 2007 08 season During the original Sabres affiliation the Americans won three Calder Cup championships and finished as runners up another six times They finished out of the playoffs only five times in 28 years The Sabres became re affiliated with the Americans starting with the 2011 12 season when after buying the Sabres Pegula purchased the Americans from former owner Curt Styres 84 85 The Cincinnati Cyclones are based in Cincinnati Ohio and have been the Sabres ECHL affiliate since the 2017 18 season after their previous affiliate the Elmira Jackals folded Unlike the Americans the Cyclones are not owned by Pegula but are instead owned by Nederlander Entertainment The Sabres previously owned an AHL affiliate in Cincinnati with the Cincinnati Swords in the 1970s Season by season recordThis is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Sabres For the full season by season history see List of Buffalo Sabres seasonsNote GP Games played W Wins L Losses OTL Overtime Losses SOL Shootout Losses Pts Points GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs2017 18 82 25 45 12 62 199 280 8th Atlantic Did not qualify2018 19 82 33 39 10 76 226 271 6th Atlantic Did not qualify2019 20 69 30 31 8 68 195 217 6th Atlantic Did not qualify2020 21 56 15 34 7 37 138 199 8th East Did not qualify2021 22 82 32 39 11 75 232 290 5th Atlantic Did not qualifyPlayers and personnelCurrent roster viewtalkedit Updated March 13 2023 86 87 No Nat Player Pos S G Age Acquired Birthplace41 Craig Anderson G L 41 2021 Park Ridge Illinois78 Jacob Bryson D L 25 2017 London Ontario38 Kale Clague D L 24 2022 Regina Saskatchewan31 Eric Comrie G L 27 2022 Edmonton Alberta24 Dylan Cozens C R 22 2019 Whitehorse Yukon26 Rasmus Dahlin A D L 22 2018 Trollhattan Sweden28 Zemgus Girgensons A C L 29 2012 Riga Latvia12 Jordan Greenway LW L 26 2023 Canton New York29 Vinnie Hinostroza RW R 28 2021 Melrose Park Illinois10 Henri Jokiharju D R 23 2019 Oulu Finland17 Tyson Jost C L 25 2022 St Albert Alberta19 Peyton Krebs C L 22 2021 Okotoks Alberta1 Ukko Pekka Luukkonen G L 24 2017 Espoo Finland46 Ilya Lyubushkin D R 28 2022 Moscow Russia37 Casey Mittelstadt C L 24 2017 Eden Prairie Minnesota21 Kyle Okposo C RW R 34 2016 Saint Paul Minnesota71 Victor Olofsson LW L 27 2014 Ornskoldsvik Sweden77 JJ Peterka LW L 21 2020 Munich Germany25 Owen Power D L 20 2021 Mississauga Ontario22 Jack Quinn RW R 21 2020 Ottawa Ontario23 Mattias Samuelsson D L 23 2018 Voorhees New Jersey53 Jeff Skinner LW L 30 2018 Markham Ontario61 Riley Stillman D L 25 2023 Calgary Alberta72 Tage Thompson C R 25 2018 Phoenix Arizona89 Alex Tuch RW R 26 2021 Syracuse New York Team captains Floyd Smith 1970 1971 Gerry Meehan 1971 1974 Jim Schoenfeld 1974 1977 Danny Gare 1977 1981 Gilbert Perreault 1981 1986 Lindy Ruff 1986 1989 Mike Foligno 1989 1990 Mike Ramsey 1991 1992 Pat LaFontaine 1992 1997 Alexander Mogilny 1993 1994 interim Michael Peca 1997 2000 Stu Barnes 2001 2003 Rotating 2003 2004 Miroslav Satan October 2003 Chris Drury November 2003 James Patrick December 2003 Jean Pierre Dumont January 2004 Daniel Briere February 2004 Chris Drury March April 2004 Daniel Briere and Chris Drury 2005 2007 co captains Rotating 2007 2008 Jochen Hecht October 2007 Toni Lydman November 2007 Brian Campbell December 2007 Jaroslav Spacek January 2008 Jochen Hecht February 2008 Jason Pominville March April 2008 Craig Rivet 2008 2011 Jason Pominville 2011 2013 Steve Ott and Thomas Vanek October 2013 co captains Steve Ott 2013 2014 Brian Gionta 2014 2017 Jack Eichel 2018 2021 Kyle Okposo 2022 present Front office Further information List of Buffalo Sabres general managers Kevyn Adams who previously played in the NHL and served as Senior Vice President of Business Administration for the Sabres was named the team s general manager on June 16 2020 88 Kim Pegula as chief operating officer of Pegula Sports and Entertainment serves as team president Head coaches Further information List of Buffalo Sabres head coaches The Sabres named Don Granato as interim head coach on March 17 2021 56 replacing Ralph Krueger who had been fired on the same day The interim tag was removed at the end of the season Of the 18 head coaches the Sabres have used in their history seven of them had previously played for the Sabres during their playing career Floyd Smith Bill Inglis Jim Schoenfeld Craig Ramsay Rick Dudley Lindy Ruff and Phil Housley Two others Dan Bylsma and Ted Nolan had played in the Sabres farm system Team and league honorsSee also List of Buffalo Sabres award winners and List of Buffalo Sabres records Hockey Hall of Famers The Buffalo Sabres has an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame Sabres inductees include 11 former players and four builders of the sport 89 The four individuals recognized as builders by the Hall of Fame includes former general managers head coaches and owners In addition to players and builders three broadcasters for the Buffalo Sabres were also awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame Ted Darling in 1994 Rick Jeanneret in 2012 and Harry Neale in 2013 90 91 Four sports writers from publications based in Buffalo and St Catharines Ontario which is within Buffalo s media territory were also awarded the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame Recipients of the award include Charlie Barton Buffalo Courier Express in 1985 Dick Johnston Buffalo News in 1986 Jack Gatecliff St Catharines Standard in 1995 and Jim Kelley Buffalo News in 2004 89 92 Buffalo Sabres Hockey Hall of Fame inducteesAffiliation with inductees based on team acknowledgementHall of Fame players 89 Dave AndreychukDale Hawerchuk Dick DuffTim Horton Grant FuhrPhil Housley Clark GilliesPat LaFontaine Doug GilmourGilbert Perreault Dominik HasekHall of Fame builders 89 Scotty Bowman Punch Imlach Seymour H Knox III Roger NeilsonRetired numbers Buffalo Sabres retired numbers No Player Position Career Number retirement2 Tim Horton D 1972 1974 January 5 19967 Rick Martin LW 1971 1981 November 15 1995 111 Gilbert Perreault C 1970 1987 October 17 1990 114 Rene Robert RW 1972 1979 November 15 1995 116 Pat LaFontaine C 1991 1997 March 3 200618 Danny Gare RW 1974 1981 November 22 200530 Ryan Miller G 2002 2014 January 19 202339 Dominik Hasek G 1992 2001 January 13 20151 When the No 14 of Robert and the No 7 of Martin were retired Gilbert Perreault was present as the entire French Connection line was given retirement together Perreault s No 11 was lowered and then raised back in the center under the French Connection banner as shown above SHK III and NRK team founders Seymour H Knox III and Northrup R Knox Two banners bearing their initials and the Sabres blue and gold reside in the KeyBank Center s rafters RJ longtime play by play announcer Rick Jeanneret A banner bearing his initials was raised on April 1 2022 Although Alexander Mogilny s number 89 is not officially retired by the team it has only been issued once since his departure following the 1995 season to Alex Tuch in 2021 93 Cory Conacher switched to 88 expressly out of deference to Mogilny in 2014 94 Likewise Ryan Miller who traditionally wears 39 wore 30 during his time with the Sabres out of deference to Hasek long before 39 was announced to be retired 95 Miller s number 30 would also eventually be retired on January 19 2023 The NHL retired Wayne Gretzky s No 99 for all its member teams at the 2000 NHL All Star Game 96 Buffalo Sabres Hall of Fame 1980Frank Christie Roger Crozier George Punch Imlach1982Tim Horton Fred T Hunt1986David Forman Don Luce Craig Ramsay1989Rick Martin Gilbert Perreault Rene Robert1994Danny Gare1995Jim Schoenfeld Robert O Swados 1996Ted Darling Seymour H Knox III Northrup R Knox1998Jack Gatecliff Larry Playfair2000Don Edwards Bill Hajt Wayne Redshaw Robert Rip Simonick2001Jerry Korab Mike Racicot Mike Ramsey2005Mike Foligno Dick Johnston Pat LaFontaine Rudy Migay Robert E Rich Jr George Strawbridge 2007Phil Housley2009Dave Andreychuk Milt Ellis2010Joe Crozier Jim Lorentz2011Alexander Mogilny Jim Kelley2012Dale Hawerchuk Rick Jeanneret2014Dominik Hasek2023Ryan Miller Scoring leaders Regular season scoring leaders Recording 552 regular season points and 39 playoff points Rene Robert is the sixth highest all time regular season points leader and the fifth highest all time playoff points leader with the Sabres These are the top ten point scorers in franchise regular season history 97 Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season current Sabres playerPoints Player Pos GP G A Pts P GGilbert Perreault C 1 191 512 814 1 326 1 11Dave Andreychuk LW 837 368 436 804 96Rick Martin LW 681 382 313 695 1 02Craig Ramsay LW 1 070 252 420 672 63Phil Housley D 608 178 380 558 92Rene Robert RW 524 222 330 552 1 05Don Luce C 766 216 310 526 69Jason Pominville RW 733 217 304 521 71Mike Foligno RW 664 247 264 511 77Danny Gare RW 503 267 233 500 99Goals Player Pos GGilbert Perreault C 512Rick Martin LW 382Dave Andreychuk LW 368Danny Gare RW 267Thomas Vanek LW 254Craig Ramsay LW 252Mike Foligno RW 247Miroslav Satan RW 224Rene Robert RW 222Jason Pominville RW 217Assists Player Pos AGilbert Perreault C 814Dave Andreychuk LW 436Craig Ramsay LW 420Phil Housley D 380Rene Robert RW 330Rick Martin LW 313Don Luce C 310Jason Pominville RW 304Dale Hawerchuk C 275Derek Roy C 266 Franchise single season records Most goals Alexander Mogilny 76 1992 93 Most assists Pat LaFontaine 95 1992 93 Most points Pat LaFontaine 148 1992 93 Most penalty minutes Rob Ray 354 1991 92 Most goals defenseman Phil Housley 31 1983 84 Most assists defenseman Phil Housley 60 1989 90 Most points defenseman Phil Housley 81 1989 90 Most goals rookie Rick Martin 44 1971 72 Most assists rookie Phil Housley 47 1982 83 Most points rookie Rick Martin 74 1971 72 Most wins Ryan Miller 41 2009 10 Most shutouts Dominik Hasek 13 1997 98 NHL awards and trophies Presidents Trophy 2006 07Prince of Wales Trophy 1974 75 1979 80 1998 99Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy Don Luce 1974 75 Pat LaFontaine 1994 95Calder Memorial Trophy Gilbert Perreault 1970 71 Tom Barrasso 1983 84 Tyler Myers 2009 10Frank J Selke Trophy Craig Ramsay 1984 85 Michael Peca 1996 97Hart Memorial Trophy Dominik Hasek 1996 97 1997 98Jack Adams Award Ted Nolan 1996 97 Lindy Ruff 2005 06 King Clancy Memorial Trophy Rob Ray 1998 99Lady Byng Memorial Trophy Gilbert Perreault 1972 73Lester B Pearson Award Dominik Hasek 1996 97 1997 98Lester Patrick Trophy Pat LaFontaine 1996 97 Scotty Bowman 2000 01NHL Plus Minus Award Thomas Vanek 2006 07Vezina Trophy Don Edwards and Bob Sauve 1979 80 Tom Barrasso 1983 84 Dominik Hasek 1993 94 1994 95 1996 97 1997 98 1998 99 2000 01 Ryan Miller 2009 10William M Jennings Trophy Tom Barrasso and Bob Sauve 1984 85 Dominik Hasek and Grant Fuhr 1993 94 Dominik Hasek 2000 01ReferencesNotes The name was selected because as public relations director Chuck Barr wrote in a press release a sabre is renowned as a clean sharp decisive and penetrating weapon on offense as well as a strong parrying weapon on defense 8 The spelling sabre is otherwise rarely used in the United States where it is saber but as with many words which can end either in re or er it is spelled sabre in neighboring Canada Citations a b LaBarber Jourdon August 11 2020 Return to Royal Sabres reveal new home and away uniforms Sabres com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved August 11 2020 Return to Royal Sabres com NHL Enterprises L P August 11 2020 Retrieved August 11 2020 Sabres bring back beloved royal blue charging buffalo uniforms NHL com NHL Enterprises L P August 11 2020 Retrieved October 6 2020 What s old is new again in Buffalo with the Sabres Return to Royal The team revealed its uniforms for the 2020 21 season on Tuesday and they re a throwback to the royal blue gold and white of the original set with some modern updates Ferreras Jesse June 12 2019 The Canucks are now among the NHL s 2 oldest existing teams without a Stanley Cup globalnews ca Retrieved June 14 2019 Gretz Adam April 17 2021 Sabres officially miss playoffs for 10th consecutive season NBC Sports NBC Universal Retrieved April 17 2021 The Early Years The 40th Anniversary site of the Buffalo Sabres Archived from the original on March 7 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 Cristina Ledra Pat Pickens November 22 2016 NHL team nicknames explained National Hockey League Retrieved March 20 2018 Whats in a Name Buffalo Sabres Archived from the original on March 7 2011 Retrieved December 15 2015 https www youtube com 9GS4yb89OsI dead link Kulyk Andrew and Peter Farrell November 1 2017 Hockey in Sin City Artvoice Retrieved April 12 2018 All about new Manchester United signing Henrikh Mkhitaryan Diario AS July 6 2016 Retrieved April 12 2018 Duhatschek Eric et al 2001 Hockey Chronicles New York City Checkmark Books ISBN 0 8160 4697 2 Bailey Budd July 18 1997 Ruff front runner to coach Sabres The Buffalo News 1B KNOX FAMILY TO SELL SABRES The Washington Post December 22 1997 Retrieved August 24 2022 Keating Peter March 28 2007 Ultimate Standings Buffalo Sabres Are No 1 ESPN the Magazine 2008 Winter Classic National Hockey League Archived from the original on May 14 2008 Retrieved December 7 2007 Buffalo Sabres 2008 Portland Pirates Become New AHL Affiliate for Buffalo Sabres Buffalo Sabres Archived from the original on June 12 2008 Retrieved June 10 2008 https www buffalonews com sports sabres nhl article383836 permanent dead link bare URL Vogl John Sabres move forward without Paille Buffalo News Archived from the original on May 24 2012 Retrieved October 21 2009 Sabres overcome three goal deficit to defeat Thrashers The Sports Network Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Retrieved March 16 2011 Ken Campbell s blog THN com Blog Explaining the potential Sabres sale The Hockey News Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved March 16 2011 Luke Moretti Posted by Emily Lenihan Report Billionaire aims to buy Sabres WIVB com Archived from the original on January 9 2011 Retrieved March 16 2011 Sabres Edge Blogs The Buffalo News Blogs buffalonews com December 1 2010 Archived from the original on December 6 2010 Retrieved March 16 2011 Sources Buffalo Sabres will announce agreement on sale to Terry Pegula ESPN January 31 2011 Retrieved March 16 2011 Vogl John February 3 2011 Last minute of play in the Golisano era Sabres amp NHL The Buffalo News Retrieved March 16 2011 Mike Harrington Golisano expresses interest in Bills Sports The Buffalo News Retrieved March 16 2011 Wawrow John Pegula set to take over Sabres Wivb com Archived from the original on February 20 2011 Retrieved March 16 2011 Golisano turned down higher bid for Sabres February 3 2011 Archived from the original on February 5 2011 Team looking forward to executive decisions Buffalo News Retrieved February 23 2011 Vogl John February 28 2011 Rivet granted a fresh start Sabres amp NHL The Buffalo News Retrieved March 16 2011 Vogl John February 28 2011 Sabres acquire Boyes from Blues in only deadline deal Sabres amp NHL The Buffalo News Retrieved March 16 2011 Miller stops 34 as Sabres shutout Canadiens Sportsnet ca Kulyk Andrew February 9 2012 The Mannheim fans land in Buffalo Artvoice Archived from the original on March 23 2016 Retrieved February 9 2012 Sabres name Pominville as captain Archived from the original on June 17 2013 Retrieved October 6 2011 Allen Kevin January 12 2013 NHL schedule released features 48 games in 99 days USA Today Sports Retrieved February 14 2013 Sabres Name Ron Rolston As Interim Head Coach WGR Archived from the original on January 16 2014 Retrieved February 20 2013 Trade Sabres send d man TJ Brennan to Florida ProHockeyTalk Prohockeytalk nbcsports com March 16 2013 Retrieved January 16 2014 Blues get Leopold in trade with Sabres National Hockey League March 30 2013 Retrieved March 30 2013 Sabres send Regehr to Kings Sports The Buffalo News Retrieved January 16 2014 Sabres trade captain Pominville to Minnesota Wild Sports The Buffalo News April 3 2013 Retrieved January 16 2014 LaFontaine Resigns Position With Buffalo Sabres Buffalo Sabres March 1 2014 Carson Dan December 24 2013 NHL Approves Miraculous Butt Goal Scored by Buffalo Sabres Bleacher Report Retrieved March 2 2014 Sabres unhappy after fans cheer Gagner s winning goal in OT that gives Coyotes 4 3 win National Hockey League Retrieved May 26 2016 Dave Lozo Buffalo Sabres Fans Do the Right Thing by Cheering a Loss to the Arizona Coyotes Bleacher Report Retrieved May 26 2016 Sabres fire coach Ted Nolan Buffalo Hockey Beat April 12 2015 Retrieved May 26 2016 Perez A J Buffalo Sabres fire coach Dan Bylsma GM Tim Murray USA TODAY Retrieved October 28 2019 Phil Housley named head coach of Buffalo Sabres National Hockey League June 15 2017 Retrieved June 15 2017 Wild acquires Tyler Ennis and Marcus Foligno Minnesota Wild June 30 2017 Retrieved June 30 2017 Battaglino Mike January 1 2018 Miller overtime goal lifts Rangers past Sabres in Winter Classic NHL com Retrieved January 6 2019 Kaplan Emily November 28 2018 Sabres move to first make history after last place finish in 2017 18 ESPN Retrieved November 28 2018 Lysowski Lance November 27 2018 Sabres tie franchise record with 10th win in a row The Buffalo News Retrieved December 12 2018 for the third 10 game winning streak in franchise history and first since 2006 07 Bove Matt November 30 2018 5 Observations Panthers top Sabres 3 2 in OT WKBW Retrieved December 12 2018 Sabres relieve Housley of coaching duties NHL com April 7 2019 Retrieved April 8 2019 Global Series games announced NHL com March 21 2019 Retrieved April 1 2019 BuffaloSabres June 16 2020 We have relieved Jason Botterill of Tweet via Twitter a b Buffalo Sabres fire coach Ralph Krueger after 12 game skid ESPN com March 17 2021 Retrieved March 22 2021 Sabres fall to Flyers in OT record skid hits 18 Sabres name Don Granato head coach Buffalo Sabres June 29 2021 a b c History of the Uniform Buffalo Sabres September 16 2006 Retrieved January 23 2020 Sabres Classics First game in Manhattan after 9 11 Buffalo Sabres March 26 2020 Retrieved January 3 2022 Buffalo Sabres uniforms no longer bear the dreaded banana slug so Uni Watch praises the new look in its 2010 11 NHL preview ESPN October 4 2010 Retrieved January 16 2014 Wyshynski Greg March 13 2012 Father of the Buffaslug Meet the man who designed Buffalo Sabres most infamous logo Puck Daddy Yahoo Sports Yahoo Retrieved January 16 2014 Klein Jeff Z Hackel Stu October 5 2010 Buffaslug Among Cartoonish Logos to Go Extinct The New York Times SABRES RELEASE THIRD JERSEY SCHEDULE National Hockey League November 20 2008 Retrieved January 23 2020 History of the NHL s Winter Classic Jerseys Sports Illustrated December 18 2016 Retrieved January 23 2020 Sabres jerseys now leaked icethetics info September 7 2010 Retrieved September 9 2010 Sabres Introduce New 40th Anniversary And Road Jerseys National Hockey League September 18 2010 Retrieved September 20 2010 SABRES WILL DEBUT NEW THIRD JERSEY ON SUNDAY National Hockey League November 22 2013 Retrieved January 23 2020 NHL and adidas unveil new uniforms for 2017 18 season National Hockey League June 21 2017 Retrieved January 23 2020 Sabres unveil 2018 Winter Classic uniform National Hockey League November 22 2017 Retrieved January 23 2020 Sabres unveil Golden Jersey to commemorate 50th anniversary National Hockey League August 16 2019 Retrieved January 23 2020 Sabres Reverse Retro jerseys are on sale now National Hockey League November 16 2020 Retrieved December 2 2020 Sabres Maple Leafs reveal jerseys for 2022 NHL Heritage Classic National Hockey League February 17 2022 Retrieved February 18 2022 Sabres bringing back retro black and red logo as alternate jersey Sportsnet ca www sportsnet ca Retrieved August 31 2022 NHL Reverse Retro jerseys for all 32 teams unveiled by adidas NHL com October 20 2022 Retrieved October 20 2022 Pepper Tom January 30 2022 Buffalo Sabres History with Canada The Hockey Writers Retrieved February 5 2022 O Shei Tim January 19 2014 Sabres Anthem Guy leads purposeful life beyond center ice The Buffalo News Retrieved March 19 2018 O Shei Tim September 25 2021 Doug Allen iconic anthem singer forgoing vaccine and stepping away from Sabres The Buffalo News Archived from the original on October 9 2021 Lipka Holly April 12 2017 Pipe dream comes true for WNY s youngest theater organist amherstbee com Archived from the original on March 20 2018 Retrieved March 19 2018 Rich Gaenzler 97 s Rock s Bull adds Sabres in arena host to duties August 6 2018 a b BUFFALO SABRES STAFF National Hockey League Retrieved March 19 2018 Rick scores spot as Buffalo Sabres team dog MSN Buffalo Sabres introduce 8 month old golden retriever Nikki as team dog for 2022 23 season WKBW 7 News Buffalo October 3 2022 Retrieved October 3 2022 AHL BOG approves sale of Amerks to Buffalo theahl com Archived from the original on September 28 2013 Retrieved June 25 2011 Buffalo reunited with Rochester as AHL affiliate The Sports Network Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved June 25 2011 Buffalo Sabres Roster National Hockey League Retrieved March 13 2023 Buffalo Sabres Hockey Transactions The Sports Network Retrieved March 13 2023 Kevyn Adams named General Manager of Buffalo Sabres Buffalo Sabres June 16 2020 a b c d Gilbert Michael Ott Ian Dierkens Chris eds 2015 Sabres History Hall of Fame Buffalo Sabres Media Guide 2015 16 Buffalo Sabres p 294 Foster Hewitt Memorial Award Winners Hockey Hall of Fame and Museum 2018 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved April 27 2018 Vogl John June 11 2013 Sabres Neale follows Jeanneret into Hockey Hall of Fame as Foster Hewitt winner The Buffalo News Archived from the original on June 15 2013 Retrieved June 11 2013 Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award Winners Hockey Hall of Fame and Museum 2018 Archived from the original on February 8 2014 Retrieved April 27 2018 Alex Tuch thrilled to join Sabres Buffalo it s gonna be like none other November 6 2021 Sabres newcomer Cory Conacher OK d No 88 number with Patrick Kane March 9 2014 Ex goalie Dominik Hasek Sabres coach Ted Nolan talk for first time since 1997 March 29 2014 Perfect setting Gretzky s number retired before All Star Game CNN Sports Illustrated Associated Press February 6 2000 Archived from the original on November 12 2013 Retrieved June 9 2014 Regular Season All Skaters Career for Franchise Career Points National Hockey League com Stats National Hockey League Retrieved June 17 2013 External links Media related to Buffalo Sabres at Wikimedia Commons Official website Buffalo Sabres Alumni Association Portals Ice hockey New York state Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buffalo Sabres amp oldid 1144695884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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