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Alex Lyon's gesture during the game is now going viral across the hockey world

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 14, 2026  (8:46 PM)
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May 10, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Buffalo Sabres goalie Alex Lyon (34) spits during the third period against the Montreal Canadiens in game three of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Bell Centre.
Photo credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images

Alex Lyon and Lindy Ruff still look tightly connected in Buffalo, even after Lyon got bumped out of the crease for a wild one.

That is why the pregame clip hit. Lyon was not sulking, hiding, or drifting to the edge. He was fully in it, bringing juice to the room before puck drop.

For a goalie who had just gone through 2 difficult outings and lost the start to Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, that matters.

It is easy to stay visible when you are the one getting the crease. It is different when you are coming off a rough stretch and the coaches go another way.

Lyon did not look like a goalie checking out. He looked like a teammate still driving energy, and in a playoff series, players notice that fast.

That fits everything Buffalo has said about him for weeks. The file you shared describes Lyon as a vocal, fiery presence the room has grown to love.

Josh Doan said Lyon «gets pretty fired up about topics,» and that edge clearly carries over into the room and onto the ice.

Alex Lyon just pulled off a gesture fans can't stop replaying

Ruff put it plainly in the file: «Every goaltender has their own personality. And his personality has a lot of fire in it. He's a character. And I think it's something the group likes.»

That is the real angle here. Lyon's role did not disappear just because Luukkonen got the net. Buffalo is still feeding off the personality Lyon brings.

The timing makes it even better. In a game that exploded early with 4 goals, the Sabres needed everyone locked in, including the goalie who was not starting.

That kind of involvement matters on a bench. A backup can either go cold or stay connected. Lyon looked fully plugged into the moment.

And this is not empty emotion from a fringe guy. Earlier in the playoffs, Lyon gave Buffalo a real lift. The file notes he won both starts in Boston and opened the postseason with a 0.89 goals-against average and a .964 save percentage in 3 appearances.

That is why this clip lands harder than a fun little pregame moment. It reinforces what the Sabres already know about him: Lyon brings compete, voice, and fire whether he is starting or not.

Buffalo can live with a goalie decision changing game to game. What it cannot lose is the bite around the room.

Lyon still gave them that. Even after the benching, he looked engaged, loud, and all-in. For a team in a tense playoff fight, that is not a small thing.