Jack Hughes breaks silence on chipped tooth, addresses trademark smile buzz following Team USA’s gold medal victory

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Jack Hughes breaks silence on chipped tooth, addresses trademark smile buzz following Team USA’s gold medal victory

Jack Hughes at the Winter Olympics (Getty Images)

Jack Hughes' Olympic Golden Goal still echoes across American hockey, and not just because it ended a title drought. The image that followed told its own story. A young star, draped in the flag, smiling through broken front teeth after delivering gold.

It was raw. It was unforgettable. And for a few days in Milan, it felt like the perfect snapshot of what winning costs and what it gives back.That moment sealed Team USA’s first men’s Olympic hockey gold medal since 1980. It also left Hughes with a grin fans could not stop talking about. Now, as the celebrations settle, he has made one thing clear. The chipped look is temporary. The memory is not.

After beating Canada for gold, Jack Hughes explains what’s next for his famous chipped grin

The defining play came 1:41 into overtime against Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

The game was tied 1-1. The pressure felt heavy. Hughes found space, finished his chance, and secured a 2-1 victory that reshaped his career in a single shift.Earlier, during the third period, Canadian forward Sam Bennett caught him with a high stick that struck him in the mouth. The blow fractured his two front teeth. There was blood. There was discomfort. There was no exit. Hughes stayed in the game.Late in regulation, during a television timeout, his brother Quinn Hughes skated over to check on him.

The stakes were obvious. The clock was ticking. Yet Quinn kept it simple.“He’s like, ‘it’s not that bad, it’s only chipped,’” Hughes recalled. “That’s what he said. … And that’s with four minutes left in the game when we were serious, like trying to win this thing, and he came up and said that.”Minutes later, Jack delivered the biggest goal of his life.

Jack Hughes, Quinn Hughes and Hilary Knight Talk Bringing Home the Gold at the 2026 Olympics

The celebration photo spread fast. Hughes, smiling with visible damage, American flag over his shoulders.

Fans embraced it. Teammates loved it. The hockey world turned the chipped grin into a symbol of toughness.But Hughes never intended to make it permanent.Speaking on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, he laughed at the attention. “I can promise you that this won’t be my thing,” Hughes said. “Honestly, it is funny, because since we’ve been back in the U.S. we feel the love like crazy and so much support, but when people are coming up for a picture, they’ll be like, ‘smile.’

… It’s funny, yeah.”He plans to repair the teeth and move on with his usual smile intact.Still, some images refuse to fade. Years from now, when people replay that overtime winner, they will remember the shot. They will remember the flag. And for a brief stretch in Milan, they will remember the chipped grin that came with gold.

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