Canadiens’ Cole Caufield’s playoff struggles aren’t new; Now they’re louder than ever originally appeared on The Sporting News.
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Cole Caufield’s post-season struggles are no longer just a talking point for the Montreal Canadiens — they’re starting to define a storyline the Canadiens can’t skate around anymore.
Buffalo Sabres physicality and disciplined defensive structure in Game 1 turned Caufield’s night into another reminder of how unforgiving playoff hockey becomes for elite scorers when space disappears and time evaporates. In a 4–2 victory, the Sabres controlled the game’s rhythm early and never surrendered it.
Right now, Caufield still hasn’t established himself as a reliable playoff producer. That doesn’t define his career, and it certainly doesn’t erase what he is during the regular season. At 5-foot-8 and 175 pounds, he remains one of the league’s most dangerous pure finishers, proven this year with 51 goals and a near miss for the Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy behind Nathan MacKinnon.
But the post-season is a different game entirely.
Buffalo Set The Tone Early
From the opening period of Game 1, Buffalo dictated how Caufield would be defended: tight gaps, heavy contact, and no access through the middle of the ice.
A defining moment came when Tage Thompson stepped up with a heavy hit that disrupted Caufield’s rhythm. The impact mattered, but so did what followed. Montreal failed to respond physically or shift momentum back, allowing Buffalo to reset the tone immediately.
Montreal’s Lack Of Response Became The Story
For a Canadiens blue line that has size across it — including multiple defensemen above 6-foot-2 and Arber Xhekaj at 6-foot-4 — the physical pushback never materialized.
Instead, Buffalo dictated territory shifts, finished checks consistently, and forced Montreal’s top players into crowded ice without consequence. That imbalance is what slowly tilts playoff games: not just star production, but whether stars can even reach their spots cleanly.
Caufield has been forced into that reality. Pressured releases, reduced time, and constant contact before he can get comfortable. That is the adjustment opponents are exploiting.
MORE: Habs Puzzled Why Cole Caufield Isn’t Producing: ‘He Just Doesn’t Have The Bounces Right Now’
The Numbers Tell The Same Story
The scouting report is backed by production trends.
Caufield’s regular season once again showed elite finishing ability: 51 goals, 37 assists, and 88 points in 81 games, plus a strong plus-29 rating. He remains a high-end offensive threat in controlled environments.
There have been flashes of playoff success. Caufield recorded three goals and four points in last year’s series against the Washington Capitals, and as a rookie during Montreal’s 2021 Stanley Cup Final run, he produced 12 points in 20 playoff games. Those stretches showed he can contribute offensively under post-season pressure.
But consistency remains the issue.
MORE: Canadiens’ Top Line Must Break Through
The playoffs, overall, have still looked different from the regular season version of Caufield. Across his post-season career, he has yet to finish a playoff run with a positive plus-minus, sitting at a career -16 while recording just four points (one goal and three assists) in this year’s eight playoff games and going scoreless in his most recent outings.
Additionally, Caufield’s 5-on-5 playoff production sits at zero goals, zero assists, and just nine shots on goal. For reference, he scored 33 goals and 16 assists while firing 165 shots at 5-on-5 during the regular season, according to moneypuck.com.
That is why this current stretch feels less like a random cold streak and more like an ongoing question about whether he can consistently drive offense once playoff checking tightens. He has shown moments of impact, but not yet the sustained game-to-game reliability associated with elite playoff performers.
The formula against him has become clear: apply early pressure, shrink his shooting angles, and force him into more difficult decisions than he thrives on.
This Isn’t Unique To Caufield
The Montreal Canadiens have seen similar volatility elsewhere in their lineup.
Juraj Slafkovský showed it earlier in the post-season — erupting for a hat trick against Tampa Bay Lightning before being neutralized as the series adjusted. Once opponents added physical contact and targeted his time on the puck, his impact faded and never fully recovered.
That cycle is familiar across the league. Young scorers often force early breakthroughs, then face immediate tactical and physical counterpunches. Some adapt quickly; others take longer.
MORE: Canadiens facing a clear Cole Caufield problem
The Bottom Line For Montreal
This isn’t about labeling Caufield. It’s about recognizing what the playoffs are demanding from him and whether Montreal can create enough structure and pushback to change how he’s being defended.
Right now, Buffalo’s approach is simple and effective: take away space, finish every check, and make Caufield earn every inch.
Until that changes, his production will remain tied to the same constraint — limited access to clean ice — and Montreal’s offense will feel the impact right along with him.
With the Canadiens now trailing in the series, the margin for adjustment is gone, and whatever answer they find for Caufield has to show up immediately, or the gap in the series will only keep widening.
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