Sabres Just Brought In A Name Fans Never Expected Back

Buffalo Sabres bring in former NHL tough guys Milan Lucic and Derek Dorsett to bolster their scouting and development teams.

The Sabres are bringing in two familiar hard-nosed names to help shape their pipeline. Former NHL wingers Milan Lucic and Derek Dorsett have been hired by Buffalo, with Lucic set to work as a pro scout and Dorsett joining the organization as a development coach, according to Mike Harrington of Buffalo News.

For Lucic, this is his first NHL job since he announced his retirement after the 2025-26 season. For Dorsett, it’s another step in a post-playing career that already included three seasons as a development coach with the Columbus Blue Jackets from 2021 to 2024, after he retired from the NHL in 2018.

Lucic’s name still carries plenty of weight in Buffalo, and not for the friendliest reasons. Sabres fans remember his time with the Boston Bruins, where he built a reputation as one of the league’s most notorious enforcers.

Over a 17-year career, he recorded at least five fights in a season eight different times. He also had a habit of escalating things before the gloves even came off, including the flying hit on Sabres goalie Ryan Miller during the 2010-11 season that drew sharp criticism from Miller afterward in a post-game press conference.

That edge was part of what made Lucic such a force early in his NHL run. Boston drafted him in the second round in 2006, and he debuted with the Bruins in 2007.

By his second season, he was already producing 17 goals, 42 points and 136 penalty minutes. He later pushed into the 60-point range in both the 2010-11 and 2011-12 seasons, cementing his role as the Bruins’ punishing presence on an evolving second line.

He was also a central piece of Boston’s 2011 Stanley Cup run, finishing that playoff march with 12 points and 63 penalty minutes in 25 games.

Lucic remained with the Bruins through the 2014-15 season before moving through the Western Conference with stops in Los Angeles, Edmonton and Calgary. His offense faded along the way, and his NHL chapter ended with an unsuccessful return to Boston in 2023-24.

He sat out the 2024-25 season, then joined England’s Fife Flyers for the 2025-26 season after another unsuccessful bid to get back to the AHL. Even with the rough edges that defined his playing days, the resume is long, and Buffalo is banking on that experience in his new pro-scouting role.

Dorsett’s path was built in a different way, but the identity was just as clear. He was never a top-six scorer, yet he carved out an 11-season NHL career by piling up penalty minutes.

He went from 150 PIMs as a rookie to 235 in his third season, and those numbers followed him through stops with the Blue Jackets, New York Rangers and Vancouver Canucks. In all, he played 515 games and logged 1,314 penalty minutes, with his 2:33 PIMs per game ranking eighth in NHL history since 2000 among players with at least 250 games.

There’s also a Buffalo-Cleveland-Columbus thread running through Dorsett’s path. Jarmo Kekalainen traded him from Columbus to New York in 2013 as part of the deal to acquire Marian Gaborik, and Kekalainen later hired him for his first coaching job in 2021. Now Dorsett will bring that same bruising background to a Sabres prospect group looking for some edge.

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