
The Buffalo Sabres have ended their NHL-record playoff drought, bringing joy not just to the team but also to fans across the league. This milestone highlights the importance of a competitive Buffalo in the NHL landscape.
Apr 13, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Buffalo Sabres center Josh Norris (9) celebrates with teammates after scoring against the Chicago Blackhawks during the first period at United Center. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images
Kamil Krzaczynski/Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images
BUFFALO, N.Y. â When Taylor Hall signed with the Sabres several years ago, the 2018 MVP summed up a belief shared by many around the NHL by saying the league is better when Buffalo is competitive.
It has been a long time since that was the case.
After numerous rebuilds and coaching and front office changes, the Sabres are back in the playoffs for the first time since 2011 after snapping the NHLâs longest postseason drought at 14 years. As division champions for the first time since â07, Buffalo will open at home against Boston.
Hallâs belief in Buffalo hasnât changed, even though his tenure there lasted just 37 games.
âIf youâre a sports fan, you have a bit of a soft spot for Buffalo,â said Hall, who is now with Carolina. âItâs nice to see that theyâve done it the right way this year. They play hard. They play fast. Theyâve committed to playing well on both sides of the puck, and thatâs the recipe. Theyâre going to be a tough out.â
Hall isnât the only ex-Sabres player to take notice and express a sense of joy over this long-awaited revival.
Casey Mittelstadt might have mixed emotions with his Bruins preparing to face the Sabres in the first round. That doesnât take away the happiness he feels for Sabres captain Rasmus Dahlin and leading scorer Tage Thompson, with whom he broke into the league with in 2018.
âVery happy for those guys,â said Mittelstadt, who was picked eighth by Buffalo in 2017. âI have so many friends there and am really close with the staff, spent a lot of time there. ... I would be lying if I said I donât cheer for them a bit. Good friends, good people and I think they deserve it.â
Fellow forward Zemgus Girgensons endured the brunt of the drought spending a decade in Buffalo before signing with Tampa Bay as a free agent two years ago. Though the drought outlasted him, Girgensons is impressed by his former teamâs transformation.
âThereâs a lot of talent on that team and theyâre doing a good job so far,â Girgensons said. âItâs just the process of it. You can see the guys have matured a lot. Itâs just the way they play. Theyâve been playing good hockey, and itâs fun to watch.â
Defenseman Tyler Myers suited up for Buffaloâs most recent playoff series in 2010 and and he shares Hallâs soft spot for the city.
âItâs my first team in the NHL, (and) I had some success there early on with the group we had,â said Myers, now with Dallas. âIâm happy to see the city and the team doing well. I obviously donât feel that way if weâre ever up against them. But theyâve had a long road. Certainly in a way, Iâm happy for them.â
Rasmus Ristolainen, whose 820 regular season games are the most of any active NHL player without a postseason appearance, finally is in with Philadelphia and feels a kinship with Sabres fans who have waited even longer than he has for this opportunity.
âThe fans are die hard and love the team, as they do here, as well. Good for them,â he said
Buffalo native Patrick Kane is a three-time Stanley Cup champion from his time with the Blackhawks . During a recent visit with Detroit, he said he could feel the buzz of the fanbase. It reminded him a bit of football in nearby Orchard Park.
âThe building gets wild,â Kane said. âYou could see the crowd get into it. I kind of compare it to the Bills a little bit, too. The Bills are good, itâs good for the city. Same thing with the Sabres.â
Itâs not just that the Sabres got into the playoffs, itâs how far theyâve come in a short while. Buffalo opened this season 11-14-4 before riding a 39-9-4 run to finish atop the Atlantic Division.
âI donât know if anybody could have predicted the turnaround from last year to this year as quickly,â Commissioner Gary Bettman said. âItâs incredible.â
Also incredible is how winning has re-energized a fanbase. After selling out just four games in 2024-25, the Sabres have enjoyed 22 sellouts this season, including 17 in a row leading into the regular-season finale.
âI always knew that Buffalo was a great market, a great hockey market, and what demonstrates that is while there was frustration that built over time, it has turned around on a dime, which means the fans are back,â Bettman said. âTheir enthusiasm is back. Itâs like whatâs happened has turned the page.â
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The Buffalo Sabres' playoff drought was the longest in NHL history, lasting several years until it was finally ended in 2026.
The Sabres' playoff qualification is seen as beneficial for the NHL, as many believe the league is more exciting when Buffalo is competitive.
Taylor Hall is a former MVP who, upon signing with the Sabres, expressed that the NHL is better when Buffalo is competitive, reflecting a broader sentiment in the league.
The Buffalo Sabres celebrated their playoff qualification on April 13, 2026, during a game against the Chicago Blackhawks.



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