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The Sabres left the Zamboni door open for a reason, and Tage Thompson answered perfectly

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Skyler Walker
May 16, 2026  (12:05)
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Tage Thomspon controversial goal game 5 vs Canadiens
Photo credit: Screenshot

Tage Thompson's strange goal has people talking again, and one old Sabres story has made it even harder to ignore what happened in Game 4.

The buzz picked up after Chris Chelios shared a story from his time around Buffalo, one that quickly gave Thompson's bizarre bounce a whole new layer.

According to Chelios, a former Sabres employee responsible for the Zamboni would leave the door slightly open on the visiting side during games.

That detail matters because Thompson's goal in Game 4 came off a weird carom, the kind of bounce that can change everything in a playoff game.

NHL on TNT pushed the story into the spotlight on social media, and it didn't take long for fans to connect the dots.

"Chelly told a story of how the old Sabres Zamboni driver used to leave the door slightly open on the visitors end in hopes of something like Tage's goal in Game 4 happening"

What sounded like an old rink tale suddenly felt a lot more relevant once people looked back at how that puck kicked off the boards and ended up in a dangerous spot.

An old rink trick suddenly feels very real

Chelios' version of the story paints a picture that's almost too perfect for hockey.

A door left slightly ajar. A visiting team caught off guard. A puck taking a path nobody fully expects.

That's what makes this such a great playoff subplot.

The goal itself already looked fluky. Now there's a story floating around that suggests strange bounces in Buffalo may not always have been treated like pure luck.

It also adds some edge to this Canadiens-Sabres series, because moments like that don't just land on the scoresheet.

They shift momentum, swing a bench, and change the feel inside the building.

Thompson's goal did exactly that in Game 4.

It gave Buffalo a jolt and turned a strange play into one of the biggest talking points of the series.

To be clear, nobody is saying that kind of thing is still happening now.

But the story is out there, and it's hard not to look at that goal differently after hearing it.

That's why tonight's game carries even more juice.

The Canadiens have a chance to close out the Sabres, and they'll want the result decided by execution, not by one more odd bounce near that famous door.

Puck drop is set for 8 p.m., and after this story surfaced, plenty of eyes will be glued to the end boards.