The Buffalo Sabres rolled to their sixth consecutive win, defeating the Nashville Predators 3-2 at KeyBank Center on Saturday, March 7, 2026. Tage Thompson scored to push his career-high point streak to 10 games, giving the club a genuine momentum story with the playoff push heating up across the Eastern Conference.
The numbers reveal a squad that has strung together six straight victories, a run that has the 716 faithful buzzing and the standings picture shifting fast. Thompson leads the charge with 11 points — six goals and five assists — across his historic stretch.
How Buffalo Beat Nashville on Saturday
The Sabres controlled the game’s key moments and got timely scoring from multiple contributors. Jason Zucker put the club ahead 2-1 at 14:17 of the second period, banging home a rebound after a Jack Quinn shot squeaked through Predators goaltender Juuse Saros and rolled toward the goal line. That goal broke a tie and gave Buffalo a lead it would not surrender.
Josh Doan made it 3-1 just 16 seconds into the third period. He took a saucer pass from Josh Norris along the goal line and snapped it past Saros from the low slot inside the left post. That early third-period strike put the contest out of reach before Nashville mounted any real push.
Nashville did claw back. Miles Wood tipped a Roman Josi slap shot past goaltender Calvin Lyon at 16:08 of the third, with Saros pulled and the Predators on the power play, cutting the deficit to 3-2. The Sabres held on for the final margin despite the late pressure, including a tense 6-on-4 situation in the closing minutes.
Tage Thompson’s Career-High Point Streak
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Thompson now owns a 10-game point streak — the longest of his NHL career — with 11 points across that span: six goals and five assists. Film shows him doing damage at even strength and contributing in all three zones, which separates a true top-line center from a volume scorer. His ability to both finish and distribute reflects the two-way threat that the front office built its salary cap strategy around when locking him into a long-term deal.
Buffalo’s line combinations deserve credit too. Quinn’s shot that set up Zucker’s goal shows how the top-six forward group generates sustained pressure and converts on secondary chances. That puck-movement hockey — zone entries with speed, net-front presence, and quick retrieval — is exactly what head coach Lindy Ruff’s system demands every night.
Thompson’s continued production ties directly into the team’s offensive zone efficiency, an area where prior Sabres rosters struggled badly. Six goals alongside five helpers across 10 contests puts him in the conversation for Eastern Conference Player of the Month recognition. The data backs it up: no other Sabres skater has posted that kind of output over any comparable stretch this season.
Key Moments From Buffalo’s Sixth Straight Victory
- Thompson scored to extend his career-high point streak to 10 games, totaling 11 points — six goals, five assists — during the run.
- Jason Zucker scored at 14:17 of the second period off a Quinn shot that slipped through Saros, putting the Sabres ahead 2-1.
- Josh Doan scored just 16 seconds into the third period on a Josh Norris saucer pass from the goal line, extending the lead to 3-1.
- Miles Wood scored on a Roman Josi power-play tip at 16:08 of the third with Saros pulled, cutting the deficit to 3-2 for Nashville’s final margin.
- Calvin Lyon started in goal and held off late Nashville pressure, including a 6-on-4 situation, to secure the two points.
What This Win Streak Means for the Playoff Push
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Six straight wins is not a fluke. The Sabres have beaten opponents with different styles across this stretch, and they keep grinding out close results. A 3-2 final over a Predators squad featuring Roman Josi and a dangerous power play is not a soft victory. Buffalo’s defensive structure and goaltending have tightened considerably during this run, and that is the more sustainable sign of a club trending upward.
The Eastern Conference wild-card race is tight through March, and every two points count. Buffalo’s ability to convert late-game leads — holding Nashville off despite a 6-on-4 situation in the final minutes — reflects a maturity that younger Sabres rosters lacked in prior years. The defensive scheme shows a team that commits to shot-blocking and clears the crease under pressure, not just one that relies on Thompson to bail them out.
One counterpoint: Nashville was without several key forwards and entered Saturday having dropped four of their last five. Atlantic Division competition does not ease, and the Sabres will need Thompson to keep producing. Their penalty kill — tested hard in the third period Saturday — must stay sharp against top power plays ahead. The front office bet on this core, built around Thompson’s contract and a wave of young forwards, and right now, that bet looks sound.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many games is the Buffalo Sabres’ current win streak?
The Buffalo Sabres extended their win streak to six consecutive games with their 3-2 victory over the Nashville Predators on March 7, 2026. The run has pushed Buffalo firmly into the Eastern Conference playoff conversation.
How long is Tage Thompson’s current point streak?
Tage Thompson carries a 10-game point streak into Buffalo’s next contest, the longest of his NHL career. He has recorded 11 points during the run — six goals and five assists.
Who scored for the Sabres against Nashville on March 7?
Tage Thompson, Jason Zucker, and Josh Doan each scored in the 3-2 win over Nashville. Zucker’s second-period goal broke a 1-1 tie, and Doan’s strike just 16 seconds into the third period extended the lead to 3-1.
Who started in goal for Buffalo against Nashville?
Calvin Lyon started in goal and held off a late Nashville push, including a 6-on-4 situation in the final minutes, to preserve the 3-2 victory.
What does this win streak mean for Buffalo’s playoff chances?
Six straight wins have pushed the Buffalo Sabres into serious wild-card contention in the Eastern Conference. Their improved defensive structure and Thompson’s elite production make this stretch more than a short-term hot spell — the roster is built to compete deep into March and beyond.






