MILAN — Jack Hughes had just one secondary assist at the 4 Nations Face-Off a year ago, playing wing for the U.S. instead of his usual spot at center. He’s aware of the criticism and doesn’t particularly agree with it.
‘’I thought I played great at 4 Nations,’’ Hughes said this week. ‘’I really did. I liked my game. Sometimes the puck doesn’t go in, and you guys just look at results-based things. That’s the way the world is, and that’s the way sports are. I liked my game there. That’s something I will stand to. I thought I played well.’’
Brother Quinn Hughes missed that NHL-run international tournament because of injury. In Milan, the smooth-skating, playmaking defenseman has shown exactly what the Americans were missing. He and Jack have consistently been the best U.S. players at the Olympics, including Quinn scoring the overtime winner against Sweden that sent their team to the semifinals.
‘’One of our best players taking over there and winning that game for us,’’ Jack said of the eldest brother of three in the family. ‘’I’m just doing my thing. I’m trying to contribute when I can, and when they put me on the ice, I’m trying to bring it.’’
After missing the end of last season with the New Jersey Devils because of a shoulder injury, it hasn’t been the easiest go for Jack Hughes over the past several months. He was sidelined for five weeks after undergoing surgery to repair an injury to his right thumb from a freak accident at a team dinner in November and also missed time just before the Olympics that threatened his availability.
It would be impossible to tell that by the way he’s playing with ‘’USA’’ on his jersey. Hughes has a goal and three assists and has controlled the play when he’s on the ice.
‘’Mentally, you can tell his intentions are going out there and trying to dominate every shift — and he can do that at the highest level,’’ center Dylan Larkin said. “He’s not waiting around. He’s going and taking charge, grabbing the puck and doing his thing with it. You can see the mindset from Day One in practice, and he’s carried it throughout the tournament and that’s what star players do.’’
Quinn Hughes, now with the Minnesota Wild after a December trade from Vancouver, fits the textbook definition of a star player. He won the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s best at his position in 2023-24 and is regarded along with Canada’s Cale Makar as one of the top defensemen in the world.