βI looked on the ice and saw my teeth,β Jack Hughes said. He already had one knocked out in an NHL game a few years ago, too. βI was like, βHere we go again.ββ
MILAN, Italy β Jack Hughes lost some teeth before heΒ won Olympic gold for the United States.
The forward who put the puck in the net in overtime to give the Americans a 2-1 victory over Canada in theΒ men’s hockey final at theΒ Milan Cortina Games on Sunday did so with a bloody mouth and less of a bite than he began the game with. That’s because Hughes was spittin’ chiclets after taking a stick to the mouth from Sam Bennett in the third period.
βI looked on the ice and saw my teeth,β said Hughes, who had one knocked out in an NHL game a few years ago, too. βI was like, βHere we go again.ββ
Well, that’s a mouthful to say.
The 24-year-old Hughes is a forward for the New Jersey Devils. He scored past Canadian goalie Jordan Binnington after a little more than 1 1/2 minutes of extra time.
Hughesβ older brother, Quinn, 26, is a defenseman for the Americans, who won the countryβs first gold in menβs hockey since the 1980 βΒ Miracle on Ice β team that upset the heavily favored Soviet Union at Lake Placid.
βNo one loves the game more than him,β Quinn said about Jack. βHeβs got so much passion. He’s a gamer. He made it happen.β
Other teammates figured that Jack Hughes will be just fine without some of his chompers. There was not exactly a whole lot of sympathy going on around among the 2026 Olympic champs.
After all, it is a well-known and frequent occurrence for hockey players to lose a tooth β or teeth β in their often-violent sport.
βWho cares at this point, to be honest?” said Matt Boldy, who scored the other U.S. goal on Binnington, just 6 minutes after the game began. “I think more people are looking at his medal than his teeth. Iβm sure heβll be OK.β
That’s certainly something to chew on.
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