Sabres finding ways to win, while Stars seek to repeat recent history

The Buffalo Sabres appear to be finding their way again.

They’ve won three in a row after going 0-10-3 over a 13-game slide, outscoring opponents 17-5 in the process, and will look to keep the momentum going when they close out 2024 with a visit to the Dallas Stars on Tuesday.

Their most recent triumph, a 4-2 victory against the host St. Louis Blues on Sunday, was one in which Buffalo got production where it had struggled for most of the season — finding its B-game when it didn’t have its A-game that had delivered the two previous wins.

“You have to win games a different way,” coach Lindy Ruff said. “The special teams won us the game. It’s something we’ve been dying to see all year. I thought that power-play goal in the third period is something that’s been missing.”

Jason Zucker’s power-play tally broke a 2-2 tie after the Blues erased the Sabres’ two-goal lead. It was their second goal with the man advantage in the game, marking just the second time this season they’ve scored more than one.

They’re 4-for-10 on the power play over their past four games.

They’ve also benefited from individual improvement, notably from forward Jack Quinn. The 23-year-old had one goal — an empty-netter — and four assists in his first 24 games before finally potting his first two goals against a goalie on Dec. 15 in a 5-3 loss to the host Toronto Maple Leafs.

Ruff spoke to him a few weeks ago about getting more “pop” into his game. The chat paid off, with Quinn bringing six points (two goals, four assists) in a three-game point streak into Tuesday’s tilt.

“I think it’s got me playing a little more direct and helping out with the habits in my game, too,” Quinn said.

The Stars are hoping a 5-1 win against the Chicago Blackhawks on Sunday will be a part of a strong second-half push, somewhat similar to last season.

A year ago, Dallas was 21-9-4 after an overtime victory against the Blackhawks. They were fifth in the Western Conference, three points out of the top spot, which they would ultimately claim at season’s end. This season, the Stars are 21-13-1, seventh in the West, but with a larger deficit for No. 1 at 10 points back of the Vegas Golden Knights.

They’ve struggled a bit of late, going 5-5-1 in their past 11 games. Injuries haven’t helped, nor has a woeful power play with a 15.4 percent success rate that ranked 27th in the NHL entering Monday’s schedule.

The power play was 0-for-20 before finally connecting for one in the second period against Chicago to put the Stars ahead 2-1.

“It was huge,” captain Jamie Benn said. “We got one on the power play (by Jason Robertson) to take the lead, and then (Matt Duchene) made a great pass to (Evgenii Dadonov) to go up two, and we kind of rolled from there.”

They’ll need Robertson, who had foot surgery in the offseason, to keep building off a strong December, in which he’s had 12 points (three goals, nine assists) in 13 games after 13 points in his first 22.

“I think December has been trending in the right direction,” he said. “I’m definitely feeling better 35 games in, and it’s exciting because we have a whole new year.”

–Field Level Media