
Jack Hughes Demands HHOF Return Golden Goal Puck (Getty Images)
Jack Hughes wants his golden goal puck back, and he is not being subtle about it. Weeks after delivering one of the most memorable finishes in Olympic hockey, the New Jersey Devils star is now focused on something far more personal.
The puck from his overtime winner in Milan is sitting in the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto, part of a carefully curated Olympic display. Hughes, though, believes it belongs somewhere else.The timing adds a layer of irony. His goal ended a 46-year wait for U.S. men’s Olympic gold, echoing the spirit of 1980 while carving out a moment of its own. Yet as the celebrations faded, Hughes realized he never actually kept the puck that sealed it.
What followed was not panic, but a quiet curiosity that soon turned into a very public stance.
Jack Hughes wants his golden goal puck back: Why the dispute has sparked debate
The play itself was quick and decisive. Just 1:41 into overtime, a turnover forced by Zach Werenski opened a narrow lane. Hughes took the pass and snapped a wrist shot past Jordan Binnington. Game over. History made. Somewhere in that rush of bodies and noise, the puck slipped away.It did not go far. The International Ice Hockey Federation confirmed it was immediately secured and designated for long-term preservation at the Hockey Hall of Fame.
By March 16, it was already on display, placed alongside Megan Keller’s gold medal-winning puck and other pieces from the 2026 Olympic run.
Hughes does not see it as a clean handoff. He told ESPN, “I’m trying to get it. Like, that’s bulls— that the Hockey Hall of Fame has it, in my opinion. Why would they have that puck?” The frustration is not just about ownership. It is about connection. “I don’t see why Megan Keller or I shouldn’t have those pucks.”For him, the value is not tied to glass cases or public viewing. It is tied to family. “I wouldn’t even want it for myself. I’d want it for my dad. I know he’d just love, love having it,” Hughes said. “When I look back in time in my career, I don’t collect too many things for myself, but my dad’s a monster collector for the three [including Luke and Quinn Hughes] of us. I know he would have a special place for it.”The Hall of Fame sees it differently. Its leadership has emphasized the importance of preserving defining moments for a wider audience, framing the puck as part of hockey’s shared memory rather than a private keepsake.For now, the puck stays in Toronto. Hughes keeps scoring, recently adding a hat trick against the Rangers, and continues building a résumé that already includes over 400 career points at a historic pace. The debate, though, lingers in the background. It is not just about a puck. It is about who gets to hold onto a moment once the game is over.

