
The Buffalo Sabres are close to winning their first playoff series since 2007, needing to beat the Boston Bruins in Game 5. Coach Lindy Ruff emphasizes the challenge ahead as the Sabres aim to overcome a long playoff drought.
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Buffalo Sabres
The Buffalo Sabres have shed the burden of a 14-year absence from the Stanley Cup playoffs that set a dubious NHL record and surged toward their next big thing.
Beat the Boston Bruins at home in Game 5 and the Sabres will skate in the second round for the first time since 2007.
âYou can expect this to be the hardest game that weâre going to have to play short-term here, because theyâre in the nothing-to-lose-and-everything-to-gain category,â said Sabres coach Lindy Ruff, whose first stint with the team was a 15-year run that included the most recent postseason appearance and series victory â plus four trips to the conference finals and one Stanley Cup finals berth.
The Bruins, behind first-year coach Marco Sturm, are reeling from a 6-1 drubbing they took to fall behind 3-1.
âThey know that if they donât put whatever they can put into the game,â Ruff said, âtheyâre done.â
Across the Canadian border, and more than 2,000 miles away, another team that has far exceeded external expectations is on the verge of a clinch. The Anaheim Ducks must do so on the road against the Edmonton Oilers, but theyâre a fearless young group thatâs hungry to give the franchise its first series victory in nine years.
âWe just believe in ourselves,â center Ryan Poehling said, reflecting on the overtime win in Game 4 for a 3-1 lead after facing a two-goal deficit. âWeâve done it all year, and I think it just teaches you throughout a season that youâre never out of it. The belief on the bench is something that you truly feel when you go out there for offensive play. Itâs a great way to play hockey for us.â
In Dallas, there will be a Game 5, too, but no clinching celebration after Minnesota evened the series.
The last time the Buffalo Sabres won a playoff series was in 2007.
The Sabres need to beat the Boston Bruins at home in Game 5 to advance to the second round.
The head coach of the Buffalo Sabres is Lindy Ruff.
The Sabres had a 14-year absence from the Stanley Cup playoffs, which set an NHL record.

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When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. EDT (TNT).
Series: Sabres lead 3-1.
The Bruins lost their cool during their Game 4 meltdown. Defenseman Nikita Zadorov received a $5,000 fine from the league for cross-checking Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin. Goalie Jeremy Swayman shouted at his own bench as he skated off after being pulled from the game.
âWe have an extremely high competitive group. We all have a standard that we all carry ourselves to, and it wasnât met. So that was just emotion,â Swayman told reporters. âItâs moved on now, and we have a job to do going into Buffalo.â
The Sabres canât wait to take the ice in front of a fired-up crowd.
âWhen I came in last season, there was lots of talk of, âThis is a hockey city, not a football city,â and that was pretty hard to believe as an outsider coming in. You can see the passion for the Bills and just everything around that,â Sabres left wing Beck Malenstyn said. âBut then I think throughout this year, weâve slowly grown to see just how supportive and passionate this fan base is.â
When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Tuesday, 8 p.m. EDT (ESPN2).
Series: Tied 2-2.
The snapshot of this rugged series between these well-built teams that comfortably finished second and third in the Western Conference during the regular season varies sharply by how many men are on the ice. The Wild have had the upper hand in even-strength play, with a 10-3 scoring advantage. The Stars power play has been dominant, with eight goals in 19 opportunities, and their penalty kill has been scored on only three times in 19 situations.
As the Stars prepared for yet another pivotal game, they expressed confidence in their 5-on-5 performance by virtue of a steady shot volume. They lead the league this postseason with 141 attempts on target, including 102 during even-strength play, which ranks fifth-most among playoff teams.
âWe just have to take the next step and get some loose pucks, get some tips,â Stars coach Glen Gulutzan said.
Only one Stars player has a plus-rating during even-strength situations in this series: defenseman Nils Lundqvist. Unfortunately, he wonât play in Game 5 after taking an inadvertent skate to the face from a collision in Game 4. Gulutzan said he hoped Lundqvist would return in the series.
âSometimes the puck goes in. Sometimes it doesnât. Itâs hockey,â Stars captain Jamie Benn said.
The Wild power play has clearly missed right wing Mats Zuccarello, who hasnât played since an upper-body injury suffered during Game 1, but his return to practice was an encouraging sign.
âWeâll see how he felt and what his response is from that,â coach John Hynes said. âBut it is definitely a step in the right direction.â
When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Tuesday, 10 p.m. EDT (TNT).
Series: Ducks lead 3-1.
While both teams were on flights back to Canada, the hockey world was still rehashing the chaotic ending to Game 4 and the unusual way in which the officials reached what almost certainly was the correct ruling on Poehlingâs squeaker of an overtime goal for Anaheim.
But that wild finish didnât alter the overall trajectory of this series: The aggressive Ducks appear to be capable of erasing any trouble caused by their mediocre defensive play, while the Oilers look ever wearier while they attempt to mount their fifth consecutive long playoff run.
âWe just believe in each other, and kind of no matter the score, we just continue to compete,â said Ducks defenseman Jackson LaCombe, the top scorer in the entire Stanley Cup playoffs with eight points. âItâs something thatâs been huge for us all year, and itâs something nice to have in your back pocket right now.â
Edmonton is down to its last chance after blowing two leads in Game 4 despite a solid performance by new goalie Tristan Jarry. Anaheim has made the most multi-goal comebacks in the sport this season under coach Joel Quenneville, who passed Al Arbour for the second-most postseason coaching victories in NHL history in Game 4.
The Ducks have won three straight in this series, and theyâve scored 20 goals in four games as they attempt to secure their teamâs first playoff series victory since 2017. But this tired Oilers core has been in big postseason jams before. They played their best defensive game of the series on Sunday, so thereâs no outward panic as they attempt to bring the series back to Southern California for Game 6.