"I liked the way that we responded," Okposo said. "I think that in the previous games, if we had a goal go against us, I thought we just let down and we stopped working, stopped competing. Tonight, I thought we stuck with the game and we made a couple good pushes."
The Predators made their own push to open the third period, rolling shifts in the Buffalo zone until Johansen caught a carom off the end boards and roofed a backhand shot with 13:28 remaining. Rinne did the rest, earning second-star honors for his 26-save outing.
While they did have to calls go against them, the Sabres pointed to other missed areas of opportunity after the loss. They went 0-for-3 against the Predators' sixth-ranked penalty kill, including a four-minute power play in the second period. Hutton also felt his counterpart could have seen more traffic.
"At the end of the day, I don't know, I just think we made it pretty easy on him over there," Hutton said. "He's a pretty good goalie. When he can see it, he's going to stop it.
"… I'm not really looking for moral victories right now, we got to win hockey games. It's frustrating at this time of the year, you know what I mean? We just got to find ways to win."
The Sabres have one more chance to win at home, against the Ottawa Senators on Thursday. They'll look to play with the same intensity they brought against Nashville and hope for a better result.
"We talked about these last two home games, and the guys brought it tonight, and we need that emotion and we need that passion on Thursday," Housley said.
"They should be pissed off. We're all pissed off. But we have to, again, garner that and bring that same effort, because if we play like that, we're going to win. It's just unfortunate that we do play like that and we get screwed."