The Buffalo–Montreal series shifts to Bell Centre for Game 3 after the Canadiens answered with a 5-1 win. The scoreline may have been inflated by hot shooting, but Montreal’s faceoff edge, home ice, and stronger Game 2 from Jakub Dobes make the Canadiens the value side to take a 2-1 series lead.
Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Montreal Canadiens Moneyline
- Win Probability: Montreal 53% | Buffalo 47%
- Best Value Angle: Montreal’s faceoff dominance is repeatable, home ice is real, and the Canadiens have now won back-to-back games in this building — the series structure genuinely favors them in Game 3.

Why This Bet Has Value
Yes, Montreal’s 26.3% shooting rate at 5-on-5 in Game 2 will not repeat. That much is true. But the rush to dismiss the 5-1 result as pure variance misses what was actually consistent and structural about that performance. Montreal won the faceoff battle 30 to 23 — their second dominant showing in the dot across 2 games, having also won 62.7% of draws in Game 1. They held Buffalo to a single goal despite the Sabres generating 29 shots on net and receiving 5 power-play opportunities. They did that with Jakub Dobes turning in a 28-save performance and with a forecheck that generated consistent offensive-zone time even when the score sheet flattered them.
The series now moves to Bell Centre for the first time. Montreal has not played a home game since eliminating Tampa Bay. The crowd factor, the line matchups, the defensive-zone starts — all of it shifts in Montreal’s favor. Buffalo was the 2-seed with home-ice advantage and split the first 2 games at KeyBank. Now they travel. The win probability model prices this at 53% Montreal — a reflection of home ice genuinely mattering in a series this close. At a fair number or better, Montreal is the right side.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Buffalo Sabres at Montreal Canadiens
- Date & Time: May 10, 2026 — 7:00 PM ET
- Venue: Bell Centre, Montreal, QC
- Series Score: Tied 1-1 — BUF won Game 1 4-2, MTL won Game 2 5-1
Sunday night features two Stanley Cup Playoff games, with the other matchup being Game 4 between Vegas and Anaheim.
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
This is the Eastern Conference Semifinals between the 2-seed Sabres and the 4-seed Canadiens. Buffalo’s playoff return after 15 years has been impressive — they knocked out Boston in 6 games and split the first 2 of this series at home. Montreal arrived here the hard way, surviving a Game 7 against Tampa Bay with just 9 shots on goal, winning on an Alex Newhook goal late in the third. They are not a team that needs to dominate possession to win. They have shown all series long that they can win ugly, win opportunistically, and win on the road. Game 3 is their first home game of this series, and that matters.
What Happened Last Game
The 5-1 final was shaped by extreme shooting variance, but Montreal’s structural performance held up throughout. At 5-on-5, both teams generated exactly 19 shots — an even territorial split. Montreal scored 5 of those on a 26.3% conversion rate; Buffalo scored 1 at 5.3%. Those percentages will normalize, but the underlying structure that created them is worth examining. Montreal’s faceoff dominance — winning 30 of 53 draws — kept the Canadiens in the offensive zone and limited Buffalo’s ability to dictate pace. Phillip Danault won 10 of 15 draws. Nick Suzuki won 9 of 16. That is not variance. That is a system working as designed.
Buffalo’s power play was the other headline. They received 5 opportunities and converted zero. After going 2 for 3 in Game 1, that collapse was damaging. It kept Buffalo from generating the secondary pressure they need to compensate for their below-average shot generation in this series. Jakub Dobes was clean and composed, stopping 28 of 29 and earning the second star. Alex Newhook drove the offence with 2 goals on 4 shots, with Alex Newhook’s 50% shooting rate at even strength being the obvious unsustainable element of the night.
What Changed
The venue is the most important change. Bell Centre is a different environment than KeyBank Center, and Montreal has not played at home since the Tampa series. Claude Julien’s group will have their crowd behind them for the first time in this matchup. On the tactical side, Buffalo’s coaching staff must repair the power play after a 0-for-5 collapse — whether the fix comes through personnel or structure is unclear, but the market will price in uncertainty around it. Montreal, by contrast, has nothing to fix in their deployment. Their faceoff units and defensive structure were both consistent across Game 2.
Recent Form
Within this series, Montreal is 1-1 but has shown more structural consistency than the split record suggests. They outshot Buffalo 28-16 in Game 1 and matched them shot-for-shot at 5-on-5 in Game 2. Their faceoff advantage has been present in every period of this series. Buffalo’s wins have depended heavily on conversion efficiency — 25% shooting in Game 1, with a 2-for-3 power play. When the Sabres’ shooting luck normalizes, their ability to control games is less established than Montreal’s.
Goaltending
Jakub Dobes is expected to start for Montreal. He stopped 28 of 29 in Game 2 — a near-perfect performance — after a rougher Game 1 in which he allowed 4 goals on 16 shots and faced a Buffalo power play operating at peak efficiency. The Game 1 performance looks worse in isolation than it was in context; Buffalo shot 25% and converted on the man-advantage at a rate that will not persist. Dobes held firm when the stakes were highest in Game 2 and has been composed throughout a strong first-year postseason run. Alex Lyon starts for Buffalo. He was excellent in the first round against Boston and in Game 1 here, but allowed 5 goals on 28 shots in Game 2. The expectation is that both goalies stabilize — the edge is not clear-cut at the position level, but Dobes at home in a tight game is a reasonable lean.
Key Skaters
Phillip Danault and Nick Suzuki have been the structural backbone of Montreal’s faceoff dominance across both games, a repeatable advantage that carries directly into Game 3. Cole Caufield has been quiet in this series so far — just 1 goal in the first round against Tampa — but his ability to score in high-danger areas at home in a tight game is the kind of variable that can shift a 1-goal game. For Buffalo, Tage Thompson has been quiet at the dot and on the scoresheet in this series. Alex Tuch leads in shot attempts but has not found the net. If the Sabres’ stars are still searching for their postseason form in Game 3, Montreal’s structured play could be enough.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Buffalo Sabres | Montreal Canadiens |
|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5-on-5 Shots | 19 shots, 1 goal (5.3%) | 19 shots, 5 goals (26.3%) |
| Series Faceoffs | 37.3% Game 1, 43.4% Game 2 | 62.7% Game 1, 56.6% Game 2 |
| Special Teams | 2/3 PP Game 1, 0/5 Game 2 | 1/2 PP Game 1, 0/5 Game 2 |
| Goaltending | Lyon: 26/28 Game 1, 23/28 Game 2 | Dobes: 14/16 Game 1, 28/29 Game 2 |
| Home Ice | Split 1-1 at KeyBank Center | First home game of this series |
The expected game script for Game 3 is a tighter contest than the Game 2 scoreline implies. With shooting percentages normalizing and Bell Centre providing Montreal’s first home environment of the series, this figures to be a close, low-margin game decided by structure and goaltending rather than the statistical variance that inflated Game 2. Montreal’s faceoff edge should again generate consistent offensive-zone access and deprive Buffalo of clean breakouts. If Dobes is sharp and the Canadiens do not need an elite conversion rate to win — which they demonstrated in the first round by winning a Game 7 on 9 shots — the structural case points in their direction.
Montreal vs Buffalo Odds
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline | MTL +132 | BUF +160 |
| Total | O 5.5 -130 | U 5.5 +110 |
| Puckline | MTL -1.5 +185 | BUF +1.5 -240 |
Key Edges
- Montreal’s faceoff dominance — consistent at 56 to 63% across both games — is a repeatable structural advantage that generates offensive-zone time and limits Buffalo’s transition game.
- Home ice at Bell Centre is Montreal’s first opportunity to play in front of their own crowd in this series, a genuine factor the model prices in at 53% win probability.
- Dobes has been trending upward across the 2 games in this series — a rough Game 1 followed by a composed 28-save Game 2 — and faces a Buffalo team whose stars have been quiet on the scoresheet.
Risk Factors
- Buffalo’s power-play regression to the mean cuts both ways — a normalized BUF PP is dangerous, and Montreal’s penalty kill was not tested at peak capacity in Game 2.
- MTL’s 26.3% 5-on-5 shooting rate creating the Game 2 blowout narrative may have created a false read on how dominant they actually were — the underlying shot data was even, not tilted.
Prediction & Verdict
- Best Bet: Montreal Canadiens Moneyline — at -120 or better
- Score Projection: Montreal 3, Buffalo 2
- Win Probability: Montreal 53% | Buffalo 47%
- Edge: Small
The case for Montreal is not built on repeating Game 2. It is built on structural advantages that have been present across both games — faceoffs, defensive structure, goaltending trending in the right direction — now combining with the first home game of the series. The win probability sits at 53% for the Canadiens, which means the market needs to price them much beyond -120 before the value disappears. At a fair number, Montreal has the right combination of momentum, venue, and structural consistency to take a 2-1 series lead. The bet is real. The confidence is measured.
Final Score Prediction: Montreal 3, Buffalo 2

