20220925_Quinn

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Don Granato could see that Jack Quinn wanted the puck on his stick as the Sabres pushed to erase a one-goal deficit during the final minute of their preseason opener on Sunday.
"As pressure mounts, you see body language from player to player," Granato said. "Some are hoping deep down maybe not to be in the situation that might cost the game. Others look at it and say, 'I want to be the guy to win the game.' Quinner has a lot of that in him."
Quinn, with the Sabres on the power play and Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen pulled for a 6-on-4 advantage, buried the tying goal short-side from the left of the net with 1:05 left in regulation. Vinnie Hinostroza scored in overtime to clinch a 4-3 victory for the Sabres over the Washington Capitals at Capital One Arena.
Dylan Cozens and Tyson Kozak also scored goals for the Sabres. Luukkonen played the full game and made 24 saves.
Anthony Mantha, Conor Sheary, Joe Snively and scored goals for the Capitals.

How it happened

PERIOD 1
Mantha scored the lone goal of the first period for the Capitals, a one-time shot from the right faceoff circle on the power play. The Sabres finished the period with an 11-6 edge in the shot column, but Capitals goaltender Zach Fucale made key saves to keep them off the board.
PERIOD 2
The Sabres briefly pulled ahead following goals from Cozens and Kozak, which gave them a 2-1 lead with 10:44 remaining in the period. The Capitals responded just 26 seconds later when Sheary buried a feed from Aliaksei Protas on an odd-man rush.

BUF@WSH: Cozens ties it up on the power play

PERIOD 3
Snively deflected a shot past Luukkonen for the go-ahead goal early in the period. The door opened for the Sabres' comeback when Hinostroza made a hard drive to the net and drew a hooking penalty against Erik Gustafsson with 2:38 remaining.
Thirty-two seconds had elapsed on the Sabres' power play before Granato called timeout, after which he sent an extra attacker on in place of Luukkonen. Quinn grabbed a loose puck from in front of the net and buried his shot to force overtime.

BUF@WSH: Quinn evens the score with a power-play goal

OVERTIME
Hinostroza redirected a shot from Lawrence Pilut to clinch the victory just 1:15 into the period.

BUF@WSH: Hinostroza tips home the OT winner

What we learned

1.Quinn, 21, was the AHL's Rookie of the Year last season after tallying 26 goals and 61 points in just 45 contests with Rochester. He played a pair of NHL games in January, tallying a goal and an assist.
Granato was asked what Quinn could add to the Sabres this season should he make the team out of training camp.
"Clutch," Granato said. "He's a clutch player. He's one of those players that, when games are on the line and pressure mounts, he embraces that. He wants the puck on his stick."
2. Granato said the early portion of camp is less about evaluating players and more about getting them into game shape. To that end, playing the full 60 minutes was valuable for Luukkonen.
The two teams also opted to hold a shootout, during which Luukkonen stopped six of seven attempts to earn the win. (Lukas Rousek scored the winning goal for the Sabres.)
"I thought that Upie pushed hard and focused hard through the whole game," Granato said. "He looked great in the shootout. His conditioning, he looked strong from a conditioning standpoint."
3. The Sabres went heavy on youth for the preseason opener. The forward group alone included seven players under the age of 22 in forwards Cozens, Quinn, Kozak, JJ Peterka, Jiri Kulich, Peyton Krebs, and Matt Savoie.
4. Cozens, still only 21 but entering his third NHL season, has looked the part of a veteran through the summer and in the early stages of training camp. He made it a point to visit Buffalo and spend time with the prospects during development camp in July. On Saturday, he scored while centering a pair of prospects in Aleksandr Kisakov and JJ Peterka during the team's intrasquad scrimmage.
Cozens was rewarded with an "A" as an alternate captain of the Sabres' young group on Sunday. Casey Fitzgerald also served as an alternate captain.
"We have so many great leaders in our group and guys that are potential future captains, have captain potential attitude, and Dylan is obviously one of them," Granato said. "I don't think it's a secret to anybody that watches our games."
5. Cozens led the Sabres with five shots, including one from the inner edge of the right faceoff circle for his power-play goal during the second period.
Cozens spoke Saturday about the shot mentality he brought to the IIHF World Championship last May and the confidence it gave him going into the summer. Read more on that here.
6. Kozak, a seventh-round pick last summer, led all players at the Prospects Challenge with four goals in three games.
He continued to show a scoring touch when the opportunity arose Sunday. Riley Sheahan carried the puck into the offensive zone and found Kozak as the trailing man on the rush. Kozak scored bar-down.

BUF@WSH: Kozak scores in 2nd period

"He's been good," Granato said. "He has continued to acclimate. He enters rookie camp, he continues to get better through rookie camp. I thought he's done the same thing through three days here watching him in practice, the scrimmage the other day and even in today's game to look more and more comfortable."
7. Krebs played against his younger brother, Dru, a sixth-round draft pick by the Capitals last summer. The two posed for a pregame picture during warmups:

Up next

The Sabres return to KeyBank Center to host the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday.
Tickets are available here.
Fans can stream the game live on Sabres.com or hear Dan Dunleavy and Rob Ray with the radio call on WGR 550. The puck drops at 7 p.m.