"I think we just played the game the way we needed to play," Kane said. "Unfortunately, it took until the third period to get into the right mindset as a group: to put pcuks on net, to forecheck with five, to get our D going down aggressive, having a good F3 so our D can get aggressive down the walls.
"We were able to basically play in their zone the entire period. And when we were moving our feet and not being slow like we were in the second, we were able to draw some penalties and capitalize on the man advantage."
But for everything the Sabres did well in the third, the opposite could be said for the second. Vegas drew four penalties in that period, three of which were drawn by former Sabre William Carrier, and scored a pair of goals thanks to their presence at the net-front.
Vegas broke a 1-1 when Alex Tuch, left unattended, tipped a point shot past Johnson, and Tuch was again in front of the net when Rielly Smith scored on the power play with 1:23 left in the period.
"It was a tough game," Sabres goalie Chad Johnson, who made 26 saves, said. "You've got to tip your hat to them. They came hard at us and got bodies to the net, and they got a lot of pressure on us and got some power plays out of it. It was a difficult game right from the start to the end."
The Sabres actually scored first in the game, when O'Reilly scored on the power play 6:24 into the contest. After that, Kane said, they took their foot off the gas. Oscar Lindberg capitalized on a neutral-zone turnover to tie the game late in the first period, and then the Golden Knights went to work.
Housley could have focused on the comeback and the silver lining of gaining a point in the standings. Instead, he said he made it clear to his players afterward that they had gotten the decision they deserved.
"I just think it's a mindset," Housley said. "It's how you approach it. We can't keep chasing games right now. We have to be ready to start the game and have that aggression in the first period. We've had it at times. I think we had it in Anaheim, but we lacked it tonight."