SEARCH


Arber Xhekaj fires bold warning at Buffalo players ahead of Game 4

PUBLICATION
David St-Jean
May 12, 2026  (6:10 PM)
SHARE THIS STORY

Arber Xhekaj fires warning at Buffalo players ahead of Game 4
Photo credit: NHL

Arber Xhekaj didn't hold back this morning, taking direct aim at the Sabres just hours before the Canadiens host Game 4 at the Bell Centre.

His message was simple. Buffalo crossed a line, and Montreal answered.

"We didn't like some of the things they did. They ran Doby and were throwing punches in every scrum at our guys. At some point you gotta push back and I think we did pretty well."

- Arber Xhekaj

The Canadiens did exactly that. They took the last two games by a combined 11-3, flipping a series that opened with a Buffalo win in Game 1.

Montreal sits up 2-1 after dropping the opener 4-2 on the road. Two straight responses with real bite have changed the tone heading into tonight.

The regular-season backdrop matters here. Buffalo finished with 109 points and a 50-23-9 record, ranked first in their division grouping.

Lindy Ruff's Sabres keep losing the after-whistle battle

Montreal closed the season at 48-24-10, three points behind. Same division, same playoff bracket. They went 7-3-0 over their final 10 to nobody's relief in Buffalo.

The four regular-season meetings split 2-2, with both teams winning once on the other's ice. None of that prepared the Sabres for what's happening now.

The defenseman's comments aren't locker-room filler. They're a public flag planted by a player whose job already includes the rough stuff Buffalo's complaining about, dropped the morning of a possible 3-1 hole.

Lindy Ruff's group has to figure out how to win a scrum again. Every loose puck, every dead-puck moment is tilting Montreal's way, and Martin St-Louis hasn't had to lift a finger.

You watch this series and it feels like one team booked a vacation while the other packed boxing gloves. Guess which is which?

The pressure changes shape entirely if Buffalo loses tonight. Down 3-1 on the road, with a heavyweight on the other bench running his mouth and backing it up.

If the Sabres don't answer on the ice in Game 4, the talking won't matter much.