Hughes lined up for the ceremonial opening faceoff with Thompson hunched over at his opposite. Behind the two men were children, wearing USA jerseys, from Pucks & Pages, the reading program initiative spearheaded Jack and his brother Luke, New Jersey governor Mikie Sherill and first gentleman Jason Hedberg and HSBE managing partners David and Allison Blitzer.
David Blitzer dropped the puck to put the final touch on the pre-game ceremony. Hughes went down the line with fist bumps for the kids as the vocals of Steven Tyler belted out: “Dream on! Dream on! Dream until your dreams come true!”
“But just to represent New Jersey, to represent our fans, I'm so proud to be a Devil,” Hughes said. “I'm so proud to play for the Blitzer family, the Harris family, the Fitzgeralds. These people, they mean so much to me. So, to represent them through all this, New Jersey means so much to me.”
Hughes was drafted by the Devils with the first-overall pick in the 2019 NHL Draft. Since that time, he’s built his career and life in New Jersey. He’s become the embodiment of a Devil and a New Jerseyan.
“I really do love living in New Jersey, playing in New Jersey,” he said. “I think early on, I don't know, for some reason, when I got drafted here, obviously, I'm their first-overall pick, and I'm an American kid, but I just feel like they accepted me so deeply, and I feel like I'm their guy. I'm their guy.
“I come to these games, and I'm driving in. Every time I drive in, all I think about is when I see people walking at 4:30 p.m. with Hughes jerseys on, unrolling my window and screaming at them, and they love that.”
Hughes represented the Devils organization and the state of New Jersey on the world stage in the Olympics. He also represented his entire country.
“Representing your country is the best, and this is something that you dream of, but when it happens, you can't even describe what it feels like,” he said. “And outside of the group of guys and everyone helping us out, it takes such a village to get each and every guy to that point, and we have so many friends and family supporting us. And then on top of that, so many great Americans that are so proud of us, so happy for us that we won, and it’s just unbelievable.”
Hughes has scored a lot of goals in his hockey career at all stages. But certainly, the Golden Goal will likely go down as his most iconic.
“It’s a ginormous deal for the country and for USA Hockey. So, I don't want to make it about myself,” he said. “But just the fact that I'm on a USA Hockey championship Olympic Gold Medal team, it changes all of our lives, all of our teammates. We're champions, and we're Olympic gold medalists, and we're the team that broke the run of not being able to win. So, to break that streak and win a gold medal, it bonds us forever as Olympic gold medalists.”
Hughes will cherish the Golden Goal forever. But more so, he’ll forever remember the entire experience from the Olympics. Not just a single play.
“It's just a moment, right? It's an unbelievable moment of my life, but I'll never be the guy that's crazy about it, because it's all about the team,” he said. “And it's just such an unbelievable group of guys that we had, and I'm so looking forward to the times we're going to enjoy. Hopefully, every year, we get together and enjoy this moment.
“But for me, it'll never be about the Golden Goal. It'll always be about our three weeks at the Olympics and that we're champions and just what a special group it was. I've said it a million times, but I’m just so proud to be American and so happy that we could get the job done.”