@StGeorgeCross17@SabresSocial Point is the ones on TV are 95% of the Habs fans in attendance. It looks worse than it is. Still credit to them though, they’re a passionate fanbase, probably number 1
@DarrowOfBuffalo@SabresSocial The Habs fans were all over the arena. They weren’t just in the seats that got a lot of camera time. Sit this one out. Your original claim is just a poor argument.
@AlphaB1tch@StephieKonicki I’ve been complimenting Habs fans for weeks. It’s very cool to see how much yall travel for your team. Very similar to Bills fans.
@DarrowOfBuffalo@StephieKonicki This is why the Habs fans are still in your arena while the supposed Sabres fans are running away with minutes and minutes to play lol.
Honestly, some of the Buffalo fanbase is truly unbearable sometimes. A bunch of you treat every bad game like the franchise needs to be burned to the ground by midnight. One minute you’re planning the parade route, the next you’re jump off the bandwagon or suddenly act like you should be making front office decisions for next season. These guys on the ice aren’t puppets or NHL 26 characters you can rage trade after every turnover. They’re actual human beings playing in the hardest playoff grind in sports. Bad games happen. Mistakes happen. What’s wild is how fast some people go from praising these players one day to calling for their heads the next. This is the second round of the playoffs, arguably the toughest postseason in sports, and after waiting 14 years to get back here some of you are still nonstop complaining and talking trash. Take a breath for a second and enjoy the fact the team is still playing meaningful games in May. #letsgobuffalo
@AlphaB1tch@StephieKonicki First of all, calm tf down you nut job lmao. Second, the point was yearly this weather sucks. Third, it was 43 and rain today lmao.
@SunBolt87@ZacKrell They already allowed current STH’s to lock on for next season.
Also like I said a lot of it is just Habs fans. Round 1 there was like 30 Boston fans in the stadium and tickets were even more expensive lol.
@DarrowOfBuffalo@ZacKrell I believe the Sabres force resales through TicketMaster and StubHub too, meaning they could force STH’s to get back in line next season and give their seats to someone else. The data is there to easily see who is regularly selling playoff tickets.
If I'm a Sabres player I'd be livid about the state of the Key Bank Center the past 3 home games. We're in round 2 of the playoffs and the lower bowl has been turned over to the Habs fans. Sabres season ticket holders should be embarrassed.
@SunBolt87@ZacKrell I agree with you there, a lot of our STH’s finally have some value on their tickets after decades of shit and are sale happy. I don’t agree with it but that’s just how it is unfortunately. Also to give credit where it’s due Habs fans travel super well and are a 6 hour drive away.
Écoutez les disponibilités médias suivant le match 4 de ce soir contre Buffalo
Tune in now to live postgame media ops following tonight’s Game 4 against the Sabres
#GoHabsGotwitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
From payday to prison in the blink of an eye. Troopers pull over this moving truck and discover a massive 1.7m dollar drug bust.
What started as a routine traffic stop on I-70 in Ohio turned into one of the largest cocaine seizures in Madison County history. Andrea Celaya-Rodriguez, 27, was behind the wheel of a Penske rental truck, claiming she was moving her life to Pennsylvania.
But Ohio State Highway Patrol troopers noticed something off immediately. Her body language—rigid, clutching the wheel, and trying to "hide" behind the door pillar as she passed the cruiser—was a massive red flag.
The Details:
The Bust: A K9 unit alerted to the vehicle, leading troopers to a produce bin in the cargo area. Inside? Three duffel bags stuffed with 110 pounds (50 kilograms) of cocaine.
The Street Value: Estimated at a staggering $1.75 million.
The "Job": Celaya-Rodriguez later admitted to the DEA that she met a man in Mexico who offered her $50,000 to drive the "shoe boxes" (kilo bricks) from Arizona to New York.
The Fake Move: Her rental agreement showed the truck was due back in Tucson, AZ, in just four days—a logistical impossibility for a cross-country move, which helped troopers dismantle her cover story.
The Legal Fallout:
Despite the roadside discussion about "working with them," the case went federal. In February 2025, Celaya-Rodriguez pleaded guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio to possession with intent to distribute cocaine.
She now faces a recommended sentence of 33 to 41 months in federal prison. It’s a stark reminder that in the world of high-stakes interdiction, a "quick $50k" often costs you years of your life.
That gut instinct of the officers led them to a huge hit that would have been on the streets if it was not for this great job by these troopers.