In his first season with the Sabres, Robert led the franchise in goals with 40,[5] and he was named to his first NHL All-Star Game.[2] The team then unexpectedly advanced to the 1973 Stanley Cup playoffs,[6] with Robert scoring the franchise's first overtime goal on April 10, 1973, in Game 5 against the Montreal Canadiens, who went on to win the series.[5][6] Robert's best offensive season came during the 1974–75 season, when he recorded 40 goals and 60 assists for 100 points.[2] It was the Sabres' first 100-point season by an individual,[1][5] and he was also named to the second NHL All-Star team that year.[2] In Game 3 of the 1975 Stanley Cup Finals, dubbed the "Fog Game", Robert scored after 18:29 of overtime against the Philadelphia Flyers to help the Sabres win their first game of the series.[5][6] The Flyers ultimately clinched the Cup in six games.[9] Robert led the league in games played (80) and hat-tricks (3) the following season. He was traded to the Colorado Rockies on October 5, 1979, in exchange for defencemanJohn Van Boxmeer.[2] Robert was named captain of the Rockies,[10] before being traded on January 30, 1981, to the Maple Leafs, with whom he played his final season in 1981–82. He finished his NHL career with 744 games, recording 284 goals and 418 assists for 702 points.[2]
Later life
After retiring from professional ice hockey, Robert acted as president of the NHL Alumni Association.[11] He was inducted into the Buffalo Sabres Hall of Fame along with Perreault and Martin in 1989.[12] His number 14 was retired by the Sabres on November 15, 1995,[5] along with Rick Martin's number 7 jersey. They were reunited with Perreault whose number 11 was retired in a 1990 ceremony.[13]
Robert divided his time between Western New York and Florida. The driveway at his home in Buffalo was constructed from pieces of the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium after its demolition in 2009. He had a heart attack on June 18, 2021, and was placed on life support.[14] He died four days later on June 22 at a hospital in Port Charlotte, Florida, at the age of 72.[6][15]