"For us it's about competing, working," Sabres coach Don Granato said. "… That's why I liked our third period. We elevated, we took more time and space away from them, we played more aggressive. Now, I don't know that we could have done that for 60 minutes. But we knew we could finish the game and we had to empty the tank at that point.
"I'm happy for that because that's what we have to do. We have to push and grind and completely drain ourselves by the end with work ethic. I'm happy for that because I do believe that's what's gonna make us better each day and we know we have to become better each day."
The Sabres opened the scoring at 5:05 of the second period when Dylan Cozens buried a feed from Brett Murray on the rush. The Red Wings responded with a push for the remainder of the period, scoring the tying and go-ahead goals just a minute and 19 seconds apart.
Carter Rowney pushed Detroit's first goal in over the line after a shot from Gustav Lindstrom created a scramble in the Buffalo crease. Pius Suter followed it up by burying a rebound off a shot from the point by Moritz Seider.
Granato expressed regret afterward for not challenging Suter's goal for goalie interference. Red Wings forward Givani Smith, jostling for position with Rasmus Dahlin, appeared to make contact with Tokarski that prompted the goaltender to fall to the ice.
"I didn't have good enough video on the bench," Granato said. "We had some trouble there. … If I had to do it again, I would have [challenged] just to defend Ticker and, you know, put confidence in our penalty kill at that point."