Boston was in control for the majority of the first game, but a quick comeback by the Sabres turned things around. The market is looking at the results rather than the game and I find more value in the Bruins here.
Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Boston Bruins Moneyline +140
- Confidence: 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Boston 46% | Buffalo 54%
- Best Value Angle: The market has overreacted to a historically anomalous comeback, and Boston’s underlying control in Game 1 warrants a live price at +140.
Why This Bet Has Value
Start with what actually happened in Game 1, because the 4-3 final score is deeply misleading. The Bruins held a 2-0 lead with eight minutes remaining in the third period. What followed was not a product of sustained Buffalo dominance — it was a historically freakish sequence. The Sabres became the first team in NHL postseason history to win in regulation after trailing by two or more goals with eight minutes or fewer remaining. Betting markets are reactive, and they are now pricing Buffalo as a -166 to -170 favorite. That feels like the market pricing in a continuation of Game 1’s final result rather than its 55-minute context. The edge here is not that Boston is the better team outright. It’s that +140 on a team that controlled large stretches of Game 1 — and whose loss required a statistical impossibility to occur — represents genuine value over what the implied probability suggests.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Boston Bruins at Buffalo Sabres
- Date & Time: April 21, 2026, 7:30 PM ET
- Venue: KeyBank Center, Buffalo, NY
- Series Score: Buffalo leads 1-0
- Broadcast: ESPN, NESN, MSG-B, SN360, TVAS2
Tonight we also have the game between Montreal and Tampa Bay, where the Bolts look to even the series.
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
This is a series defined by seeding surprises. Buffalo ended a 14-season playoff drought — the longest active in the NHL — by winning the Atlantic Division with 109 points, while Boston snuck in as the No. 1 wild card with 100 points. The Sabres are the division winner hosting a wild card, and the market respects that. But the narrative of a young Buffalo team riding enormous emotion and home momentum is now fully priced in after one game. The question for bettors is whether that emotional tailwind is worth -170 for a second straight home game, or whether Boston’s structural advantages reassert themselves.
What Happened Last Game
The Bruins generated just seven shots and four scoring chances in the third period and had almost no answer for the Sabres’ forecheck once Buffalo seized momentum. However, for the first 52 minutes of that game, Boston controlled the proceedings. Jeremy Swayman was the team’s best player, and the Bruins’ penalty kill was a wall — going a perfect 4-for-4 against a Sabres power play that had not converted on its previous 25 opportunities. Swayman finished with 34 saves in a loss that was not a 60-minute indictment of Boston’s game plan. Two defensive zone turnovers — one by Charlie McAvoy and one by Hampus Lindholm — directly preceded three of the four Buffalo goals, and the Sabres scored four times in a 6:46 span to produce a result that obscures the game’s true competitive shape.
What Changed
Bruins coach Marco Sturm acknowledged his team played too conservatively with a lead, saying they were “in the perfect spot” but made “two mistakes” that let the game slip away. The clear adjustment Boston must make is to push for a third goal when ahead rather than ceding zone time and inviting pressure. Score effects played a significant role — McAvoy logged 40.5% of ice time and the Bruins’ defensive structure was a deliberate product of protecting a lead, not evidence of a team being outplayed. If Boston gets ahead again, expect a more proactive third period. Sabres coach Lindy Ruff credited his team’s physicality, noting the Sabres outhit Boston 53-38, and that is a real tactical adjustment Buffalo will try to replicate.
Recent Form
Series form consists of one game, which was anomalous even by the standards of this sport. Buffalo’s confidence is genuine and earned — Tage Thompson scored twice in a span of 3:42 to tie the game, with Mattias Samuelsson netting the go-ahead goal 52 seconds later — but confidence derived from one historically improbable comeback is emotionally real yet statistically flimsy as a predictive tool. Buffalo has been in strong regular season form, going 7-2-1 over its last 10 games and averaging 3.5 goals while allowing 2.5, which is legitimate supporting context but should not override the series-specific evidence.
Goaltending
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen started Game 1 for Buffalo and is expected back in net for Game 2. He stopped 17 shots in Game 1 — a low workload that reflects Boston’s limited offensive output in a game where they were largely playing not to lose. Jeremy Swayman is Boston’s clear starter, and his 34-save performance in a game with a high shot volume against is arguably the most encouraging data point in this entire series for Boston bettors. Luukkonen posted a 2.49 GAA and .910 save percentage during the regular season, with Alex Lyon serving as a tandem option. The Sabres have used a two-goalie system all year, and whether Luukkonen can sustain strong play deeper into a playoff series remains an open question for a franchise with limited recent postseason experience.
Key Skaters
David Pastrnak had a power play goal and two assists in Game 1’s loss, continuing his role as the most impactful individual in this matchup. He put up 100 points in the regular season and had six points in four regular season games against Buffalo. Tage Thompson scored twice on seven shots and went plus-3 in Game 1, and his ability to win the forecheck battle will be central to whether Buffalo can recreate the third-period chaos. McAvoy was held off the scoresheet but played 40.5% of the game’s minutes, the highest of any skater. His effectiveness in clearing the zone will be crucial in determining whether Boston’s defensive zone collapses again.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Boston Bruins | Buffalo Sabres | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5 on 5 | Led for 52+ minutes, 7 shots in 3rd period | Outshot Boston, 24 scoring chances over final 40 minutes | Unclear — Boston had control but collapsed late |
| Series Chance Quality | Limited in 3rd, passive with lead | High-volume forecheck, 9 high-danger chances in final 2 periods | Buffalo edge at 5 on 5 |
| Special Teams | PP: 23.4% regular season; PK was perfect in Game 1 | PK strong at 81.9%; power play 0-for-3 in Game 1 | Boston edge if power play activates |
| Goaltending | Swayman: 34 saves, outstanding in Game 1 | Luukkonen: 17 saves, light workload | Swayman edge based on Game 1 form |
| Matchup Edge | Pastrnak leads all players; McAvoy’s minutes share is massive | Thompson and forecheck unit are the primary threat | Slight Boston edge at top-end talent |
| Regular Season Context | 45-27-10, 100 points, 3-1 vs Buffalo | 50-23-9, 109 points, superior home record 26-10-5 | Buffalo home edge is real and already priced in |
The expected game script is competitive hockey where Boston attempts to be more proactive offensively. The Sabres will push their forecheck early, backed by a loud building. If Boston gets ahead again, the real test is whether Sturm’s team has the nerve to push for more goals rather than reverting to the passive approach that cost them in Game 1.
Market & Odds Analysis
The market has moved sharply toward Buffalo after Game 1, which is a predictable and understandable reaction. But the key question is whether the market is overweighting a historically unprecedented comeback versus the broader 55-minute picture. Buffalo is listed as -170 favorites with Boston at +140 on the moneyline, with a total of 6.5 goals with the over at +106 and the under at -130. Buffalo at -170 implies roughly a 63% win probability. Based on the actual Game 1 evidence — a Bruins team that was statistically a 94%+ favorite with eight minutes left — that feels about 7-9 percentage points too generous to the Sabres. Boston at +140 implies roughly 42% win probability. An honest assessment suggests Boston wins this game closer to 46% of the time, which creates a modest but real edge at that price. The under at -130 is also worth noting — Game 1 ended with four goals coming in under seven minutes, which inflated the total, and neither goaltender looked beatable for most of the game.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Buffalo | -105 to -120 |
| Moneyline — Boston | +220 to +240 |
| Total | 6.5, over +145 / under -175 |
| Puckline — Boston +1.5 | -170 to -190 |
Key Edges
- Boston’s Game 1 loss required a historically unique comeback that no betting model should be extrapolating forward as sustainable expected value for Buffalo.
- Jeremy Swayman’s Game 1 form was elite — 34 saves against a high-volume attack — and gives Boston a legitimate floor in a sport where goaltending drives variance.
- Pastrnak remains the best player in this series, and the Bruins’ power play — which went untested in Game 1 — is a structural weapon against a Buffalo penalty kill that has not scored a man-advantage goal in its last 28 opportunities entering this game.
- Boston’s road record is concerning at 16-16-9, but they went 3-0 at KeyBank Center during the regular season, which mutes the home-ice narrative somewhat.
Risk Factors
- Buffalo’s home crowd and emotional momentum from the Game 1 comeback are genuinely powerful variables in a best-of-7 that is now in their control — it is not purely noise.
- Tage Thompson’s ability to dominate at 5 on 5 and along the boards is a real tactical problem Boston has not yet solved. Two games of that will start becoming a sustainable trend.
- If Boston plays conservatively with a lead again and cedes zone time, the Sabres’ forecheck has already demonstrated it can manufacture goals in bunches in a short window.
- Luukkonen’s true performance level in Game 1 is unclear given he faced only 20 shots — his actual form under playoff pressure is a legitimate unknown with a small sample.
Prediction & Verdict: Boston vs Buffalo
- Best Bet: Boston Bruins Moneyline +150
- Score Projection: Boston 3, Buffalo 2
- Win Probability: Boston 46% | Buffalo 54%
- Edge: Small
The case for Boston here is not that they are the better team. It is that the market has repriced them based on a 6:46 span of hockey that no analytical model would treat as repeatable, and the underlying structure of Game 1 strongly favored the Bruins until the final minutes. Swayman is in excellent form. Pastrnak is the best individual player in the building. And the Sabres’ power play — the weapon most capable of creating sustained momentum — was completely neutralized in Game 1. At +140, you are getting better-than-fair value on a team that lost a game it had a 94% chance of winning with eight minutes left.
That said, this is a small edge and the confidence rating reflects it. Buffalo is a legitimate division winner, Thompson is in elite form, and the forecheck is a genuine tactical threat Boston must solve. This is a lean, not a hammer.
Final Score Prediction: Boston 3, Buffalo 2

