3. Past experience in clutch situations
In terms of average years, Montreal has the youngest roster in the NHL (25.88), while Buffalo has the third-youngest team (26.60), and both teams have struggled at home this postseason; each team is 2-4 at home during the 2026 playoffs, including a pair of Game 5 losses for the Sabres at KeyBank Center and a pair of Game 6 losses for the Canadiens at Bell Centre.
Buffalo’s Rasmus Dahlin, who’s 26 years old, became the only defenseman in NHL history to have a five-point game with his team facing elimination in a playoff game (Game 6 at Montreal) but has never played in a Game 7. Thompson, Buffalo’s top forward, has also never played in a Game 7. Tuch is the only player in the Sabres’ projected lineup with any Game 7 points (two in three games; one goal, one assist); Tuch had a 2-1 record in Game 7s with the Vegas Golden Knights.
Newhook, who’s 25 years old, is the only player in this series with a winning goal in a Game 7 after scoring the tie-breaking goal in the third period at Tampa Bay in Game 7 of the first round. Montreal’s young forward duo of Caufield and Nick Suzuki has a 2-0 record in career Game 7s, with Suzuki having two points (one goal, one assist) in those winner-take-all games. Montreal’s No. 1 defenseman Lane Hutson had an assist in his only career Game 7 against Tampa Bay in the first round, while Slafkovsky was held without a point in that game (his only Game 7 appearance).
A key metric for Montreal entering Game 7 is its skating speed: in terms of 20-plus mph speed bursts, Suzuki (37; 96th percentile among forwards), Newhook (28; 92nd percentile among forwards) and/or Hutson (17; 97th percentile among defensemen) are potential difference-makers on any given shift.
A key metric for Buffalo’s top two players entering Game 7 is their shot speed; in terms of 90-plus mph shot attempts, Dahlin (eight; second) and Thompson (five; tied for seventh) are both among the NHL’s best this postseason.