hockey

Jack Hughes' Olympic golden goal is a reminder of how important hockey dentists are in the sport

By STEPHEN WHYNOYahoo Sports

Jason Schepis was at home with his kids in New Jersey watching the gold medal men's hockey game at the Olympics when he saw some of his handiwork get scattered all over the ice late in the third period of a thriller. Jack Hughes, the 24-year-old forward for Team USA, had just taken a stick to the mouth from Canada's Sam Bennett and, as he explained later, saw at least one full tooth and shards of others laying on the ice. Schepis knew those teeth, too.

In fact, as the New Jersey Devils team dentist, he had repaired those very same chompers before after Hughes took a high stick in the playoffs a few years ago. “We did the root canals, fixed it up,” Schepis recalled. “Those were his teeth.

” Hughes, like hockey players tend to do, shook off the injury, and he went on to score in overtime for a 2-1 win and America's first gold in men's hockey since 1980. His gap-toothed grin became the picture-perfect encapsulation of a sport where missing teeth is a badge of honor and "spittin' chiclets” is so ingrained in the lexicon that it's the name of a popular hockey podcast, not just the candy-coated chewing gum pieces that are somewhat tooth-sized. To say that hockey players need dentists is something of an understatement.

Every team has one and these specialists join team doctors and other medical staff at every single NHL game, ready to jump into action when the need arises. “When there is an injury to the mouth, our physicians are like, ‘Oh yeah, we’re so happy you’re here because we would not have been able to do that,’” San Jose Sharks dentist Mark Nishimura said. “Sometimes we’re really not busy, and other times, when it’s bad, it’s bad.

” It was bad when Nishimura was handed Joe Pavelski's teeth following a puck to the players' jaw during in the 2019 playoffs, though that resulted in a goal . Later that year, Keith Yandle lost nine teeth, returned to the game and played 168 more in a row. Brent Burns took a wayward stick to the face in 2013 that knocked out three pearly whites, and since returning he has skated in more than 1,000 games in a row .

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