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2005–06 Buffalo Sabres season

2005–06 Buffalo Sabres
Division 2nd Northeast
Conference 4th Eastern
2005–06 record 52–24–6
Goals for 281
Goals against 239
Team information
General Manager Darcy Regier
Coach Lindy Ruff
Captain Daniel Briere and
Chris Drury
Alternate captains Mike Grier
Jochen Hecht
Jay McKee
Arena HSBC Arena
Team leaders
Goals Chris Drury (30)
Assists Maxim Afinogenov (51)
Points Maxim Afinogenov (73)
Penalties in minutes Andrew Peters (100)
Wins Ryan Miller (30)
Goals against average Ryan Miller (2.60)
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2006–07 →

The 2005–06 Buffalo Sabres season was the 36th season of operation, 35th season of play, for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 22, 1970. The season not only saw the team advance to the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since the 2000–01 season, but saw them advance to Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals before losing to the eventual Stanley Cup champions, the Carolina Hurricanes.

After starting the season 7–8–0 through their first 15 games by November 9, 2005, the Sabres were sitting in fifth place in the Northeast Division and were trailing the Northeast Division-leading Ottawa Senators by 11 points. The Sabres then went on to have only eight regulation losses out of their next 50 games; by March 16, 2006, they had improved to 44–16–5 to move within one point of the Northeast Division-leading Senators. Despite having only two players to play all 82 games (Ales Kotalik and Henrik Tallinder), Buffalo would finish the season with a 52–24–6 record for 110 points and a fourth-place finish heading into the playoffs. The season was the first 100–point season in 23 years and tied the 1979–80 club for the second-best point total in franchise history. The Sabres were one of five teams to reach the century mark in power-play goals during the regular season, scoring 101. The Sabres also finished with 25 road wins, another franchise record.

The Sabres were recognized on June 22, 2006, at the NHL Awards Ceremony, when Lindy Ruff edged Hurricanes coach Peter Laviolette to win the Jack Adams Award as Coach of the Year in the closest vote in the award's history. Ruff was the second Sabres coach to win the award.


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