Cami Clune and Lindy Ruff were at the center of a Buffalo Sabres night that turned a mic failure into a lasting anthem moment.

What started as a routine pregame ceremony at KeyBank Center shifted fast when Clune lost her microphone midway through O Canada before Game 5 against the Boston Bruins.

Instead of an awkward pause, the building took over.

Sabres fans sang the rest themselves, and the sound gave the moment far more weight than any clean arena performance could have.

That's why the clip hit so hard across the hockey world. It didn't feel staged, and it didn't feel forced. It felt like Buffalo being Buffalo on a big playoff night.

Clune still came back and finished the job, delivering The Star-Spangled Banner once a replacement microphone was in place.

But by then, the story had already changed.

A lot of viewers had the same question right away: why was O Canada being played at all with two American teams on the ice?

Buffalo's border identity showed up again in national anthem with Sabres

The answer is simple, and it says plenty about the Sabres' market.

Buffalo sits just 5 miles from the Canadian border, and Ontario has always been part of the club's home crowd.

That's why the Sabres play both national anthems at every home game, no matter who comes in. It isn't a playoff gimmick.

It's part of the franchise's routine and history.

The tradition goes back more than 5 decades, which makes it more than a nod to visiting fans. It's an acknowledgment that Buffalo's hockey identity has always crossed the border.

That context made Tuesday's scene land even harder.

At a time when cross-border tension can drag into sports talk, the arena delivered a reminder of what still connects this game.

Boston won the game in overtime and cut Buffalo's series lead to 3-2, but that wasn't the part most people carried out of the building.

They remembered the crowd, the anthem, and the way a Sabres tradition suddenly became the biggest story of the night without a single shift being played.

POLL
APRIL 29 |497 ANSWERS
Anthem controversy addressed: why the Sabres play both national anthems even when no Canadian team is playing

Should every border-market NHL team play both national anthems at home?

Yes
328
66 %
No
169
34 %

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