During the 1981-82 season, Buffalo finished with a 39-26-15 record, sixth-best in the league (out of 21 teams), before losing to the Boston Bruins in the division semifinals. The Sabres held the ninth and 16th selections in the first round - just as they do this year - along with the sixth pick.
Scotty Bowman, Buffalo's head coach and general manager, used those picks to select two future Hall of Famers. The third ended up as part of the trade tree that brought Alexander Mogilny to the organization in 1988.
Bowman's first pick off the board was Phil Housley, a left-handed defenseman from Saint Paul, Minnesota. Housley played eight seasons in Buffalo, earning All-Rookie honors and playing in three All-Star games with the Sabres. His 1,495 games played and 1,232 (338+894) career points were the most by an American-born player at the end of his 23-year career.
Housley was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2015.
The late Paul Cyr was selected ninth overall after playing three seasons with the Victoria Cougars in the WHL. Cyr finished his NHL career with 471 games played, 101 goals, and 140 assists. The left winger played six seasons in Buffalo before being traded halfway through the 1987-88 season in exchange for Mike Donnelly and a fifth-round pick.
That fifth-round pick paid off for Bowman's successor, Gerry Meehan, who chose Alexander Mogilny from CSKA Moscow in the Soviet Union. Mogilny went on to have an illustrious NHL career, playing six of his 17 NHL seasons with Buffalo, earning him a spot in the Sabres Hall of Fame in 2011.
Bowman's last first rounder was arguably his best of the 1982 draft, as Buffalo took 2017 Hall-of-Fame inductee Dave Andreychuk 16th overall.
The Hamilton, Ontario native played 12 of his 23 years with the Sabres, netting 368 goals and 436 assists. His 1,639 games played are 7th most all-time. He held the NHL record with 274 power-play goals until Alexander Ovechkin surpassed him this past season.
During the 1982-83 season, Buffalo's record slightly dipped by four points to 38-29-13 even though they had a longer postseason run. Buffalo swept the Montreal Canadiens in the first round before forcing a Game 7 against the Prince of Wales champion Boston Bruins and losing 3-2 in overtime.