Buffalo Sabres
Record: 11-14-4
What’s gone wrong: The worst part about trainwreck franchises is they often give their fans
just enough hope to buy in for a split second that maybe they’re finally turning a corner.
On Nov. 24, Sabres fans woke up to their team in a playoff spot, sitting in third place in the Atlantic division with an 11-9-1 record. Buffalo had won seven of its last 10 games and was riding a three-game winning streak, with star sniper
Tage Thompson’s imminent return from injury expected to give the team another major boost.
But then the Sabres did what sad organizations always do: They smashed those good vibes into smithereens and fell into a familiar, deep pit of hopelessness. It’s not just that Buffalo has lost eight games in a row, it’s the
soul-crushing fashion of these defeats that’s most agonizing.
Why are they still struggling to win games? Buffalo’s 14.1 percent power play ranks 30th in the NHL.
Dylan Cozens, on pace for less than 40 points, and
Jack Quinn, on pace for less than 20 points, have been colossal disappointments.
The Sabres boast plenty of puck-moving and offensive talent on the back end, but they’re missing a reliable, high-end defensive stopper.
Buffalo’s defensive metrics are below-average across the board and the club’s not getting enough saves when
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen needs a night off — Devon Levi and
James Reimer have combined for just three wins in 10 games.
Outlook: The Sabres need to play at a near 100-point pace the rest of the way to hit 91 points, which was the mark that helped the
Capitals win the final wild-card spot in the East last year. That’s a tall order not only because this roster is flawed but because years of losing have eroded this group’s culture and resilience.
What reason is there for fans to believe that this core can pull off an against-all-odds charge back into the playoffs instead of folding under the first sign of pressure like usual?
Zooming out, the Sabres have one of the best prospect pools in the NHL, which means brighter days should be ahead, but how many years has that been touted as the silver lining? When you’ve gone 13 straight seasons without a playoff berth, you stop believing that the light at the end of the tunnel is real, even though it might be.
Making the playoffs panic meter: 9.5/10