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Summer Series: Buffalo Sabres Defining Moment

July 9, 2025 by Last Word On Hockey

Hockey and sports in general can be broken down into moments. Some moments are bigger than others and chart the course of a franchise and an entire league. These moments can define a team’s destiny for years to come. Last Word on Hockey’s Summer series looks at these defining moments. Today we featured the biggest defining moment of the Buffalo Sabres

Buffalo is a proud hockey town. Always has been, and always will be, despite the lack of success from their professional club. The Sabres were added into the NHL in 1970 along with the Vancouver Canucks. Since then, they still have yet to accomplish the ultimate goal, winning the Stanley Cup. Their defining moment is when they came closest to that trophy, and ultimately changed the rules of the sport.

Here’s a look at the moment that defined the Buffalo Sabres.

Buffalo Sabres Defining Moment

The Buffalo Sabres defining moment came on June 19th-20th, 1999. Why multiple days? Because the moment came early in the morning of Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final, a game that had started the night before. In triple overtime, Brett Hull of the Dallas Stars scored to clinch the Stanley Cup victory. Almost immediately after, it became apparent he had his foot in the crease while shooting the puck. At the time, there should have been a review, and a subsequent overturn. However, the play was not reviewed in the moment, and the Dallas Stars won the 1999 Stanley Cup championship. Unfortunately, the Sabres have yet to compete in the Stanley Cup Final since then.

The Run-Up

The Sabres finished the regular season in 1998-99 with 91 points, barely getting into the playoffs. To find the reason how they made the playoffs, much less the finals, look no further than Dominik Hasek. Hasek was coming off of back-to-back Hart and Vezina Trophy wins the two seasons prior, and had go settle for only winning the Vezina in 1999. Hasek was unbelievable. He played 67 games, posting a 30-18-14 record with an impressive 2.09 goals-against average and a .937 save percentage, both among the NHL’s best.

The Sabres swept the Ottawa Senators in the first round. Hasek allowed just three goals in those four games. In the second round the Sabres defeated the Boston Bruins in six games. And finally beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in five games in the conference final. Buffalo was a gritty defensive team, match that with the best goaltender in the world, good things are going to happen. For context to how important Hasek was to this Sabres team, no skater had more than 13 points in the 21 playoff games for Buffalo. While the Dominator posted a 1.77 GAA and a .939 SV%.

The 1999 Stanley Cup Final

The 1999 Stanley Cup Final between the Dallas Stars and Buffalo Sabres was a tightly contested, defence-first series defined by stellar goaltending and one of the most controversial endings in NHL history. In Game 1 in Dallas, the Sabres stole home ice with a thrilling 3–2 overtime win, thanks to Jason Woolley’s game-winning goal and a brilliant performance from Dominik Hašek. The Stars responded in Game 2, evening the series with a 4–2 victory, as Brett Hull and Jamie Langenbrunner provided key goals and Ed Belfour shut the door when it mattered.

The series shifted to Buffalo for Game 3, where Dallas eked out a narrow 2–1 win behind a clutch goal from Mike Modano and another strong showing from Belfour. The Sabres answered in Game 4, winning 2–1 in overtime on a goal by Dixon Ward, once again leaning on Hašek’s brilliance to tie the series 2–2.

Back in Dallas for Game 5, the Stars played their most complete game of the series, earning a 2–0 shutout with Belfour stopping every shot he faced and the Sabres’ offence stalling.

The Moment

In Game 6, after nearly five full periods of hockey, Brett Hull scored the Cup-winning goal in triple overtime, despite his skate being in the crease. A violation of the rules at the time. The goal stood, the Stars won 2–1, and Buffalo was left with the heartbreak of the now-legendary “No Goal” moment.

Four of the six games in the series were decided by a single goal, and two went to overtime. Hasek and Belfour put on world-class performances throughout the series. The Stars ultimately won the series 4–2, capturing their first Stanley Cup. While the Sabres’ remarkable run ended in controversy and disappointment.

Here’s a quote from a story on the NHL website about why the goal stood:

“With the score tied 1-1, Hull found himself in front of Hasek attempting to deflect a shot in. Hasek stopped the initial shot, Hull took control of the rebound, kicked it to his stick and scored the game-winner from right in front to end the marathon match. In 1999, the league had a rule that a player’s skate could not be in the crease on a goal, and Buffalo felt Hull’s skate was indeed illegally in the crease. But Hull had gained possession of the puck, rotated his skates out of the crease and then stepped in after he had possession of the rebound.”

There was a memo that went out earlier in the season stating that exceptions were to be made based off of a player having possession of the puck while in the crease. This memo was not widely understood at the time, and didn’t have a track record of being implemented when the incident happened.

The Aftermath

The emotional side of things, is not pretty. Lindy Ruff had many comments regarding the unfairness of the goal that was scored. Players publicly were frustrated as well. If you’re walking around in Buffalo, the words “No Goal” will haunt the local souls that experienced it or know about it through their parents.

The toughest side of things for Buffalo is that they haven’t been back to the cup final. The closest they ever got ended them up on the wrong side of the most controversial decision in NHL history. Dallas fans will say it was a good goal, Buffalo fans will say no goal until they die. It’s unfortunate for a city who puts so much pride into their sports teams.

On the league side of things, the crease rules were changed the following year. And it makes sense. This is not what the league wanted. Dallas was the superior team on paper, players like Hull, Modano, Belfour. Dallas was a fantastic hockey team, and they went up against a true team in every sense of the word. And also the best goaltender the game may have ever seen. There were great storylines for each team heading into that final. And for it to end on a controversy the way it did, was a catastrophe.

The NHL’s rule change, implemented for the 1999–2000 season, abolished the previous standard that prohibited attacking players from entering the goal crease before the puck. Under the new rule, players were allowed to be in the crease at any time as long as they did not physically interfere with the goaltender’s ability to play their position or the puck. This is still the rule that is used in hockey today, despite there being more controversy over what goalie interference is.

Other Defining Moments

Moment 2: The Fog Game

Before the 1999 controversy, the Sabres made it to the Stanley Cup Final one time before that, in 1975. A series they would drop to the Philadelphia Flyers in six games. The “Fog Game” refers to Game 3 of those finals. It was played on May 20, 1975, at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (commonly known as “The Aud”). It remains one of the most unusual and memorable games in NHL history due to extreme weather conditions inside the arena.

Due to an unseasonably hot and humid night in Buffalo and the lack of air conditioning inside the arena, a thick fog repeatedly formed over the ice surface, making visibility extremely poor for players, officials, and fans. The fog became so dense at times that the puck and players were nearly invisible, forcing the game to be stopped multiple times so players and officials could skate around the ice waving towels and using cardboard to try to dissipate the haze. The surreal and eerie atmosphere made for one of the most unusual settings ever seen in an NHL game.

Despite the bizarre conditions, the teams pressed on, and the Sabres managed to earn a thrilling 5–4 overtime victory. The winning goal came from Rene Robert, a key member of Buffalo’s famed “French Connection” line, who scored to lift the Sabres to their first win of the series and cut Philadelphia’s lead to 2–1.

Why It Matters

The Sabres were a newer franchise at the time. And it’s just a fun moment in hockey history. The French Connection still has a statue outside of the current arena in Buffalo. Those players, connecting for an OT win in the Stanley Cup Final is a cool moment in itself. Mix in the fog and we don’t think there will ever be an environment like that seen again in the NHL.

Moment 3: The 2006 Eastern Conference Final

There’s no controversy, there’s no crazy environment. This moment, was pure bad luck. The 2006 Eastern Conference Final featured the Buffalo Sabres and the Carolina Hurricanes in a thrilling seven-game series that saw both teams battle through adversity and injuries. The Sabres, plagued by a depleted defence corps, managed to push the series to the limit with gritty performances and timely scoring.

Just how depleted was the defence core?

By Game 7 against Carolina, the Sabres were without four of their top-six defencemen:

  1. Teppo Numminen – sidelined with a groin injury.

  2. Dmitri Kalinin – out with a broken ankle.

  3. Henrik Tallinder – suffered an arm injury during the series.

  4. Jay McKee – missed Game 7 after developing a serious staph infection in his leg just hours before puck drop.

This left Buffalo with a patched-together blueline featuring Brian Campbell and Toni Lydman as the only regulars, alongside less experienced or depth players like Jeff Jillson, Doug Janik, and Nathan Paetsch, some of whom were playing in their first meaningful NHL playoff games.

In the final game, the Sabres took an early lead, but the Hurricanes stormed back with three third-period goals, including the series-clincher from Cory Stillman, to win 4–2 and advance to the Stanley Cup Final. The series was marked by its high pace, close games, and the Sabres’ remarkable resilience despite injuries, but ultimately, the Hurricanes proved too strong and went on to capture their first-ever Stanley Cup.

Why It Matters

This was just textbook bad luck for the Sabres. They were also missing their starting centre in Tim Connolly. Carolina went on to beat the Edmonton Oilers to win the Stanley Cup. And you get the feeling that guys like Danny Briere and Ryan Miller would have been holding that trophy if it weren’t for injuries. Just an incredibly unfortunate turn of events for the Sabres.

Close

The 1999 Stanley Cup Finals Epitomizes the Buffalo sports experience. You have really good teams, and talented players, and you just can’t find yourself lifting a championship trophy. Buffalo will one day be a city of champions. By the time they do, the fans won’t have to thing about no goal. They won’t have to think about the French Connection never winning one together. And they won’t have to think about what would have happened if the Sabres were healthy in 2006. Buffalo fans are truly forged in fire.

Main Photo: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The post Summer Series: Buffalo Sabres Defining Moment appeared first on Last Word On Hockey.

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