3-2 Sabres FINAL
Series tied 2-2
Habs flip the script after the early punch
Buffalo landed the first blow — Samuelsson at 6:32 of the first, clean as the sheet shows — but everything after that belongs to Montreal. The scoreboard on your tab now shows the Canadiens up 2–1, which means Newhook and Caulfield have both answered the bell.
That’s a full momentum theft.
The underlying numbers from the first period still show Buffalo’s early control — 8–1 shots in the opening frame — but Montreal clearly didn’t let that script harden. They absorbed the pressure, found their legs, and then struck back twice with their skill players.
Newhook continues to be the hinge of this series for Montreal — every time they need a pulse, he gives them one.
Caulfield adding the other is exactly the kind of star‑turn goal that flips a bench from surviving to hunting.
In the end, yes — Buffalo dragged this thing back onto their terms and finished the job.
And that’s the real story of the night: a game that should have tilted Montreal’s way after they punched back with Newhook and Caulfield instead became a slow, grinding reclamation by the Sabres.
Here’s the shape of it, clean and without embroidery:
1. Montreal had the momentum — and couldn’t bank it.
Up 2–1, at home, with their skill guys scoring, they had the emotional leverage. But they never turned that into territorial control. Buffalo kept winning the long shifts, the trench shifts, the oxygen‑draining shifts.
2. Buffalo’s structure reasserted itself.
This is the part that keeps showing up in this series: when the game gets heavy and repetitive, Buffalo’s game ages better. They don’t need rush chances; they need time and pressure. They got both.
3. The Sabres’ push wasn’t dramatic — it was inevitable.
They didn’t flip the game with a single moment. They just kept leaning until Montreal’s wall bowed. And once it bowed, it cracked.
4. Montreal’s early spark never became a fire.
Two goals from Newhook and Caulfield should have been the ignition point. Instead, it was the high‑water mark. After that, Buffalo dictated the mood, the pace, and the geography of the rink.
So yes — Buffalo prevailed.
Not by brilliance, but by persistence.
Not by speed, but by shape.
Not by chaos, but by the slow, suffocating insistence that this game would be played their way.
Latest stats, highlights and source data from NHL.COM Buffalo Sabres - Montréal Canadiens - May 12, 2026 | NHL.com