"We played a very good, solid game tonight," Nilsson said. "A great team game. We controlled the game throughout 60 minutes and played very good defensively and had very good structure and didn't give them a lot of chances. The shots I had were mostly from the outside and the guys in front of me did a very good job of boxing out and giving me a clear view of the pucks."
Nilsson was making his third-straight start in net as Robin Lehner has rested with an illness, but the results hadn't been in his favor in the first two games. The Sabres blew a three-goal lead in the third period of his debut in Philadelphia and were never able to overcome a slow start at home against Minnesota on Thursday.
On Saturday, neither problem was apparent. The Sabres came out of the gate strong - it was their best start of the season in the eyes of forward Kyle Okposo - and took the lead within the first 10 minutes. When they began the third period with a 2-0 lead, they were able to protect it with two key penalty kills and by adding extra cushion with a power-play goal of their own.
All the while, their goaltender was solid. The defense created lanes for him to see the puck, and he did his part by limiting rebound chances. He ended the night with 33 saves.
"I don't like when I have thoughts like this, but in the first period, he just looked so solid, so confident in net, I thought it was going to be hard to get one by him," Sabres coach Dan Bylsma said. "When you see your goaltender make three, four, five saves that are just hitting him right in the chest and he's swallowing them up, you know he's playing big and strong and square in the net."
Johan Larsson opened the scoring for the Sabres, while Okposo and Sam Reinhart both added power-play goals. Rasmus Ristolainen earned his team-leading seventh assist on Okposo's goal in the second period.
Despite the outcome of their 4-0 loss to Minnesota, the Sabres had been happy with the way they played in the second and third periods of that game. They tried to play the same way on Saturday, and this time they were able to bear down on their scoring chances.
"I think we learned from the other night and we just played smart, kind of boring but hard at the same time," Okposo said. "We just kind of were patient, waited for our chances, we let them make some mistakes and we played hard. I think that's a heck of the win for us, especially with the situation being what it was."
The victory snaps a four-game winless streak for the Sabres, and they'll quickly have an opportunity to begin a new streak in the other direction. Buffalo plays at Winnipeg on Sunday at 3 p.m. to conclude the first of their 19 back-to-back sets this season.