Buffalo’s No. 20 pick from the 2026 NHL Draft is already getting a reputation as a clean fit, and for the Sabres, that’s a pretty good place to start.
The selection in question is Miami (Ohio) center Ilia Morozov, a 17-year-old who has quickly drawn praise for looking like the kind of middle-of-the-ice presence Buffalo has been hunting for. Linc Zdancewicz of McKeen’s Hockey went so far as to name Morozov his favorite Round 1 pick, calling him “exactly what the Sabres need” if they want to keep their current window open.
“Buffalo shocked everyone at this year's draft with their selection of Daxon Rudolph at Pick 4. However, their second selection in Round 1 was less shocking and in contention for the best fit between team and player,” Zdancewicz wrote Thursday. “Morozov's style of play is exactly what the Sabres need down the middle if they want to extend this contending window.”
He added: “Though he was considered a safer pick, Buffalo looks to be the spot where Morozov can unleash more offense in his game, a team that will be competing for the next half-decade, he could be like Anton Lundell.”
That kind of buzz is building for a reason. Morozov was the youngest player in NCAA Division I college hockey this past season, and while his numbers at Miami were modest - 20 points, with eight goals and 12 assists, in 36 games - he held up well against older competition.
At 6-foot-3, the Russian forward has the frame and skill set to grow into a useful middle-six center, and there’s still enough runway for his offense to take another step. In time, that could even push him into first-line territory if everything clicks.
The catch is patience. Morozov is expected back at Miami for at least one more season, and he may need another year or two after that, either with the Redhawks or with the AHL’s Rochester Americans, before he’s ready for the NHL.
That timeline could eventually line him up as a replacement for current third-line center Ryan McLeod, who can become an unrestricted free agent in 2029.
Morozov also made his case again this week at the Sabres’ Development Camp at Harborcenter in downtown Buffalo, where his skating and shot stood out right away. For a bigger young player, he moves with ease. His edge work looks clean, and he doesn’t seem weighed down by his size.
His shot showed up too. Morozov has a compact, efficient release that lets him make the most of his 205 pounds when he has a little room to work with.
What may have sealed Buffalo’s interest, though, is the way he carries himself. The effort is obvious, and the compete level keeps showing up.
“I believe that life is fair,” Morozov told reporters at the 2026 NHL Scouting Combine. “If you put (in) honest work, if you do 100% every time … you'll get the result.
That's my experience. If I wasn't doing something right, it was going the wrong way.
If I'm doing right, it's going the right way. So that's, personally, just my experience.
And I believe I did lots of work to be here.”
That mentality fits what Buffalo has emphasized during its 14-year rebuilding push, one that finally ended with a playoff appearance this spring. Players such as Zach Benson and Josh Doan were rewarded with long-term extensions, and Morozov appears to come from the same competitive mold.
He may not be the flashiest name from the class, and he’s probably not the most naturally gifted player on the ice every night. But he battles, he positions well, and he rarely gets outworked.
That’s why he entered the draft with a high floor. The Sabres are betting that kind of player finds his way to the NHL, even if he never becomes a 100-point star.
For now, the path is straightforward: another year at Miami, then more growth from there. If things go as expected, Morozov should be a regular in Buffalo before 2030 arrives, and maybe sooner.
In Other News...
Sabres Quietly Made A Goalie Move Fans Did Not See Coming
Buffalos offseason roster management kept taking shape around the margins, with the Sabres making a series of moves that added depth and trimmed decisions at a time when the club is still trying to sort out the edges of its roster. Among the more notable developments was the decision to move on from goalie Devon Levi, a transaction that fit into a broader stretch of business that also included a new deal for defenseman Olen Zellweger and fresh one-year agreements for former Sabres Dennis Gilbert and Conor Sheary.
The overall picture has been one of a team working methodically rather than making a splash, layering in AHL help with Jason Polin and Trevor Kuntar while keeping an eye on the bigger question of how the roster will look once the dust settles. For a Buffalo group coming off a playoff run, the pace of the summer has suggested patience, but the Levi move in particular stands out as the kind of decision that can say a lot about where the organization thinks it is headed next. [Read more 🡒]
Sabres Make Another Low-Risk Forward Bet With Something To Prove
The Sabres added another winger with something to prove, bringing in Aidan McDonough on a one-year, two-way deal as they continue to stock the organization with low-cost depth options. McDonough, 26, arrives after putting together his best pro season in the AHL with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, where he showed some finishing ability and enough consistency to put himself back on the radar.
For Buffalo, the appeal is straightforward: a modest commitment, a player with NHL experience in the background, and a forward who has spent time at both the pro and college levels trying to force his way into a bigger role. McDonough was a Canucks draft pick in 2019 and has already had a small taste of the NHL, but the next step now is less about resume and more about whether he can turn another strong year in the minors into a longer look. [Read more 🡒]
Patrick Kane Buzz Has Sabres Fans Thinking It Might Finally Happen
The Patrick Kane chatter is back in a familiar place, and Sabres fans know exactly why it keeps grabbing attention. Buffalo has long been tied to Kane because of his local roots, and every time his future comes up, the idea of him ending up in blue and gold instantly feels bigger than a routine rumor. It is the kind of storyline that hangs around because the fit makes sense on paper, even if the actual path there has always been harder to pin down.
What makes this round more interesting is that Buffalo is not the only name in the mix. Kanes next move is still being debated, with Detroit and even Chicago lingering as possibilities, and that keeps the whole thing from settling into anything concrete. For a Sabres team whose fan base is always searching for a true needle-moving addition, the buzz is enough to stir hope again, but not enough to call anything close to finished. [Read more 🡒]
