SEARCH


Nick Suzuki sparked major backlash after a controversial gesture toward Buffalo

PUBLICATION
Vincent Carbonneau
May 19, 2026  (6:34)
SHARE THIS STORY

Nick Suzuki sparked major backlash after a controversial gesture toward Buffalo fans
Photo credit: Screenshot

Nick Suzuki and Martin St-Louis got their Game 7 edge from a flashpoint with Jason Zucker after contact around Jakub Dobeš.

That clip hit fast because it showed exactly where Montreal's captain was at in the biggest game of the season.

Zucker got into Dobeš' space, and Suzuki came right back at him with a quick glove to the face. It was not a long scrum. It was a message.

And it was the right kind of message for the Canadiens in that moment.

When a goalie gets bumped in a Game 7, teammates are supposed to notice. When the captain answers instantly, the whole bench notices even more.

That is why the sequence matters. Suzuki was not putting on a show for the crowd. He was protecting his crease and telling Buffalo there would be a response every time things got loose around Dobeš.

It also fit the tone of the night. This series had already been nasty, emotional, and full of little moments that pushed both benches over the line.

Buffalo fans are furious after Nick Suzuki's controversial in-game gesture

This is what captains do in May. Not every leadership moment is a speech or a big goal. Sometimes it is one sharp reaction that tells the room nobody is getting pushed around.

Suzuki gave Montreal that.

And because it came around Dobeš, it carried even more weight. The Canadiens needed their goalie settled, protected, and locked in. Seeing the captain jump right in helps that.

Zucker is the kind of player who lives in those scrums. He gets under skin, hangs around the crease, and forces teams to answer him. On this play, Suzuki did.

That does not mean the Canadiens won because of one slap in a scrum. It means the clip captured the kind of pushback Montreal had to show on a night where every inch mattered.

It also says something about Suzuki's growth. He is not only the calm offensive driver anymore. He is clearly comfortable stepping into the dirt when the game needs it.

That is a big detail for a young team in a series like this.

Montreal has leaned on skill, speed, and nerve all spring. But playoff hockey always asks one more question: who answers when the crease gets touched?

On this one, Suzuki answered right away.

And that is why the clip traveled. It was not just a heated little exchange. It was Montreal's captain making sure Buffalo felt the line around Jakub Dobeš.