SEARCH


The NHL faces backlash over its referees for the Canadiens-Sabres game

PUBLICATION
Skyler Walker
May 6, 2026  (8:15 PM)
SHARE THIS STORY

Mar 24, 2025; Elmont, New York, USA; NHL referee Wes McCauley (4) puts on a headset for a video review of a disallowed Islanders goal during the third period between the New York Islanders and the Columbus Blue Jackets at UBS Arena.
Photo credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Nick Suzuki and Martin St-Louis won't just face Buffalo tonight. They'll walk into a Game 1 already clouded by Wes McCauley's assignment.

The NHL has McCauley, #4, and Pierre Lambert, #25, working the 7:00 PM opener at KeyBank Center.

That was enough to light up the pregame conversation around Montreal before warmup even starts.

In Quebec, McCauley's name still hits a nerve with Canadiens fans. For a lot of them, every whistle he makes comes with baggage.

That feeling has been built over years. A missed call here, a soft penalty there, and the memory always seems to land in the same place.

The hard part is this: fans remember moments, not full samples. And in the NHL, there is no easy public file that settles whether one referee really leans against one team.

So the reputation sticks.

Once a referee becomes part of a fan base's bad memories, every new assignment feels like a warning shot.

McCauley also arrives with playoff weight on him. He worked Montreal's Game 7 against Tampa Bay and came into this one off another Game 7 assignment, which only adds more heat to the discussion.

Why this turns into a Game 1 issue between the Sabres and Canadiens

The strange part is that the numbers don't fully match the outrage. Montreal went 3-0-1 in McCauley games in 2025-26, while Buffalo went 2-2-1, and this is his first postseason pairing with Lambert.

That still won't quiet anything once the puck drops.

If the Canadiens take the first penalty, every replay and every reaction will hit social media in seconds.

And that's where this becomes a real problem for Montreal. Buffalo's crowd will already be loud in a playoff opener, and one early call can turn that building into a wave.

St-Louis won't want his bench feeding that story.

A team that gets wrapped up in officiating usually starts reaching with sticks, arguing instead of resetting, and slipping off its structure.

That puts pressure on Suzuki and the leadership group right away.

They need a disciplined start, a clean first 10 minutes, and no free power plays for the home side.

Because the Canadiens do not need to beat the Sabres and the noise around the stripes. The cleanest answer tonight is simple: give McCauley nothing to decide.