The 26-year-old forward grew up in Syracuse, New York, rooting for the Sabres and fondly remembers their runs to the Eastern Conference Final in 2006 and 2007. His favorite player was Buffalo forward Tim Connolly, whose parents are still neighbors with his parents in Syracuse, but he can list many others from those teams, including Daniel Briere, Chris Drury and Thomas Vanek.
"I want to get back to those times. I really do," Tuch said earlier this week. "I want to help the Sabres in any way possible get back to winning ways, get back to the playoffs, because the city of Buffalo loves their sports teams. They love the Bills and they love the Sabres.
"That's faltered at times because of the lack of success that we've had in the past 10 years. So hopefully I can be one of the guys to help turn that around."
In his second season with Buffalo after being acquired in the trade that sent center Jack Eichel to the Vegas Golden Knights on Nov. 4, 2021, Tuch has done his share to help the Sabres climb into the playoff race this season, setting NHL career-highs with 30 goals, 34 assists and 64 points in 59 games. But Buffalo (33-28-6) has work to do to end its 11-season postseason drought. It is six points back of the Pittsburgh Penguins and New York Islanders, who are tied for the first wild card into the playoffs from the Eastern Conference, heading into the finale of a three-game road trip at the Philadelphia Flyers on Friday (7 p.m. ET; SN1, NBCSP, MSG-B, ESPN+, SN NOW).
With an average age of 26, the Sabres are one of the NHL's youngest teams and Tuch is among the few players on their roster who have been through a playoff race before. Tuch reached the postseason four times with Vegas, including a trip to the 2018 Stanley Cup Final, and hopes his experience can be of value to Buffalo's younger players.
"As you get older you try to become more consistent, and you learn how to become more consistent," Tuch said. "Seeing those guys go through the ups and downs of the season, I'm trying to lend and help them out and be a person that they can come to talk to and ask questions and that kind of thing, because I went through the same thing."