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Sabres Rally To Beat Bruins 7-6 In Shootout

Every time the Buffalo Sabres fell behind to the Boston Bruins, Drew Stafford pulled them back.

Stafford scored three times, including the overtime-forcing goal with 28 seconds left in regulation, as the Sabres rallied from a first-period, two-goal deficit and pulled out a 7-6 win on Tyler Ennis' decisive shootout tally Saturday night.

"You don't want to fold up when you're down. It's not in your game plan," said Stafford, who has four career hat tricks - two in eight games. "We knew if we kept battling, we had a chance to take this game."

The dramatic finish overshadowed the mistakes Buffalo made in allowing four goals on the first 11 shots.

Jason Pominville had two goals and two assists, and Thomas Vanek had a goal and assist as the Sabres improved to 4-0 in shootouts this season. They won consecutive games for the first time since Dec. 3-4.

"There were a lot of sloppy plays," Pominville said, referring to how the Sabres found themselves trailing 4-2 within the first 15 minutes. "But we dug deep and found a way at the end."

If the Sabres intend to make a playoff push, folding was not an option. Buffalo began Saturday 12th in the Eastern Conference.

Stafford forced overtime by scoring in the closing seconds of a game that featured three lead changes.

After Ennis gave the Sabres a 3-2 lead in the shootout, Zdeno Chara lost control of the puck and shot wide on the Bruins' final chance.

Chara had a goal and assist, and four Bruins defensemen scored in a game for the first time. Joining Chara, were blue-liners Andrew Ference, Dennis Seidenberg and Steven Kampfer with a goal each.

Tyler Seguin had a goal and assist, and Brad Marchand also scored for the Northeast Division-leading Bruins, 3-0-2 in their past five. Boston lost for the fourth time (19-1-3) in a game in which it led this season.

"With the leads we had, we should have won the game easily," Bruins goalie Tim Thomas lamented.

Thomas stopped 16 shots over the final two periods and overtime in place of Tuukka Rask, who was pulled after allowing three goals on 16 shots in the first period. Thomas didn't stop a shot during the shootout, allowing Pominville, Vanek and Ennis to score.

Bruins coach Claude Julien switched goalies because Rask was fighting the puck. That was particularly the case on Stafford's first goal, which cut the Bruins lead to 4-3 in the final minute of the first period.

Catching Rask cheating off the right post, Stafford attempted to squeeze in a shot from a bad angle. Rask caught a piece of it and had dropped down to cover the puck, as Stafford got his stick in to shove the puck over the line.

Thomas had a tough night, too. Stafford forced overtime by digging the puck out of a scrum in front of the Bruins net, and lifted it over Thomas, who was attempting to scramble back into position.

"It's not an easy game to watch from behind the bench," Julien said. "At the end, we didn't handle that well at all."

The Sabres were forced in a position to have to rally again after they squandered a 5-4 lead entering the third period. Seguin and Kampfer scored 3:58 apart.

"To come out in the third too passive, there's still areas we need to be better," Vanek said. "But at the same time, I think we showed some guts to come back and keep fighting."

This program aired on January 2, 2011. The audio for this program is not available.

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