CHICAGO -- Lindy Ruff was asked about another player on the roster during a pregame interview when the Buffalo Sabres coach shifted the conversation.
“I thought with (forward JJ) Peterka back in, that top line’s starting to look like a dangerous line,” Ruff said of left wing Peterka, who returned Oct. 16 against the Pittsburgh Penguins after missing the two previous games with a concussion, center Tage Thompson and right wing Alex Tuch.
Perhaps it was a sign of things to come, since that line figured prominently in the Sabres’ 4-2 win against the Chicago Blackhawks at United Center on Saturday.
It was Thompson starting things off for the Sabres in the first period. It was Peterka scoring what proved to be the game-winning goal late in the second.
As the Sabres (2-4-1) look for more consistency in this early part of the season, their top line is starting to show the way.
“We’re definitely building some momentum, some chemistry,” said Thompson, who had a goal and an assist against Chicago.
Thompson has six points (four goals, two assists) in seven games, tied for second on the Sabres with Peterka (four goals, two assists in five games) and behind Tuch with seven points (two goals, five assists) in seven games.
“At the end of last season, we finished pretty strong as a line and I think having [Peterka] out of the lineup, he’s obviously a big part of our team and produces a lot of offense for us,” Thompson said. “For us, when he’s in the lineup and he’s moving his feet, he’s a lot for the other team to handle. He’s got a lot of speed and a lot of good skill. For me and 'Tuchy', it’s just trying to find him. I think we work well together, so it’s been fun.”
There was a lot of fun to be had for Buffalo on Saturday. Outside of the second period, when Blackhawks forward Craig Smith scored twice to erase the 2-0 lead the Sabres built in the first period, they felt they played a strong game.
“I thought we backed off a little bit,” Ruff said. “We talked about it after the second goal, just get back on our toes again, try to create some zone time, create some pressure, get pucks in behind them. They were doing a good job through the neutral zone of forcing dump-ins. But once we got it below the goal line, I thought we created some good opportunities.”