Sabres at Blackhawks | Recap

CHICAGO -- Tage Thompson scored two goals, including his 40th of the season, to help the Buffalo Sabres win the Atlantic Division title with a 5-1 win against the Chicago Blackhawks at United Center on Monday.

The Sabres won a division title for the first time since 2009-10, when they finished first in the Northeast Division. Buffalo clinched its first Stanley Cup Playoff berth since 2011 on April 4, ending the longest postseason drought in NHL history.

“It means a lot,” said Sabres coach Lindy Ruff. “Division champions, from where we came from in December, I’m going to enjoy this (division champions) hat for one day. I’m going to work on the next hat.”

Alex Tuch had a goal and an assist, and Rasmus Dahlin had two assists for the Sabres (50-23-8), who have won four in a row. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen made 15 saves for Buffalo.

“It’s awesome,” Tuch said. “I’m really proud of this group. It’s another step in the right direction. It’s something that, yeah, it feels really good, but we’ve got a bigger goal in mind. Get some good momentum going into the playoffs. It doesn’t mean anything if you don’t lift the ultimate trophy at the end of the year.”

BUF@CHI: Thompson buries wrister past Knight in 2nd period

Spencer Knight made 21 saves for the Blackhawks (28-39-14), who have lost four in a row and nine of 10.

“I think it's a little unfortunate these last couple games have gone this way because honestly we've done tons of good things to build this in the right direction, and unfortunately this sours your taste,” said Chicago coach Jeff Blashill. “In the end, when we look back, we'll know we built a lot of building blocks to have success in the future.”

Ryan Greene gave the Blackhawks a 1-0 lead with a short-handed goal at 3:58 of the first period. Ilya Mikheyev carried the puck into the offensive zone and flipped a backhand pass to Greene, who scored on a forehand shot in front while fighting off Tuch.

Josh Norris tied the game 1-1 at 19:02. Josh Doan fed Norris from inside the right point, and Norris put a wrist shot past Knight from the left face-off circle.

Thompson gave Buffalo a 2-1 lead at 13:00 of the second period. Thompson worked the puck away from Chicago defenseman Louis Crevier at the bottom of the left circle and scored from in front of the net.

“I think the ice was a little choppy today,” Thompson said. “A fortunate bounce for us. It kind of stuck in his (Crevier’s) feet and just have some time in the slot there and just looking for a hole.”

Tuch put the Sabres ahead 3-1 at 5:38 of the third period when he took a stretch pass from Dahlin and scored on a breakaway. The goal game shortly after the Sabres killed off a 5-on-3 short-handed situation.

Thompson's second goal of the game made it 4-1 at 11:13. He scored on a one-timer from the left circle after taking a pass from Dahlin for this 40th.

“It definitely means a lot,” Thompson said. “You set goals for yourself. You set goals as a team. You certainly do as individuals, as well. That’s always a place I want to try to get to and feel I’m capable of. When you get close or you get it once or twice, you want to keep pushing the envelope and see how much more you can get. For me, I want to score and help the team win. I think that’s what they rely on me to do. It’s become something that I think should be a standard for myself. Obviously I’ve been playing with a lot of great players. It’s never about one guy. It feels good, but it’s a group.”

BUF@CHI: Thompson strikes again in 3rd period

Ryan McLeod scored from the slot at 18:35 for the 5-1 final.

Ruff played for the Sabres from the 1979-80 season until the 1988-89 season. He coached them from 1997-98 until 2012-13, and from 2024-present.

“Oh, it’s extremely satisfying,” he said. “This last four months has been so much fun coaching this group. You hope you get the team in the right place and become consistent. But these guys have exceeded my expectations.”

NOTES: Buffalo won its division for the seventh time in its history, following 2009-10 (Northeast), 2006-07 (Northeast),1996-97 (Northeast), 1980-81 (Adams), 1979-80 (Adams) and 1974-75 (Adams). … The Sabres became the fifth team in NHL history to clinch a division title after overcoming a standings deficit of eight or more points (eight on Dec. 8, 2025), following 2007-08 Washington Capitals (10), 1990-91 Pittsburgh Penguins (nine), 2012-13 Capitals (eight) and 1969-70 Blackhawks (eight).