In their quiet moments since assuming roles as leaders of the Buffalo Sabres, Rasmus Dahlin and Tage Thompson have often had the same conversation.
For more than a decade, good players have come and gone in Buffalo and won elsewhere. They would be the ones to do it here – to steer the franchise out from under the weight of a 14-year playoff drought.
“I think we’ve had that conversation maybe 10, 15 times, honestly,” Dahlin told Sabres.com. “There’s a lot of people that have come in here and tried to change it, and then they leave. But to be the ones that really, really are trying every single year, and eventually you’re a big piece of that change. That’s bigger than a lot of things. Me and Tage, we’ve just manifested it or whatever, talked about how that feeling would be, and it’s indescribable, honestly.
“There’s so many guys that have asked out or don’t want to be here. But we said to each other, ‘This is the place. We’re not leaving. We have to turn this around.’ It’s a crazy feeling.”
Dahlin and Thompson – the two longest-tenured Sabres with eight seasons in Buffalo – saw their mission through on Saturday. The Sabres officially clinched their first playoff berth since 2011 following Detroit’s loss to the New York Rangers.
This drought was not theirs to bear – it began when Dahlin was 11 years old, seven years before his selection as the top pick in the NHL Draft. Thompson was playing for the Alaska All-Stars 14-U team when the Sabres last made the playoffs.
Fourteen years of no playoffs in a hockey-crazed town like Buffalo comes with baggage. It’s the undertone beneath every question in a postgame scrum, the angst felt after an early-season loss. Dahlin and Thompson took it head on.
“Me and Dahls, we came in at the same time,” Thompson said. “A lot of other guys were here too that came and went. Guys before us, even, and a lot of good players, too. That was something we always talked about. You see those guys go on and have success, and sometimes it stirs up in your mind, ‘Well, what would happen if I left?’
“We always agreed that it’d be really special to be the guys that turned it around here. Fourteen-year playoff drought, whatever it’s been. To be the guys that brought playoff hockey back to Buffalo is something that was a big goal for us.”



















