menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

‘Greatest Country In The World’: USA Hockey Player Promotes Patriotism After OT Win

19 0
19.02.2026

1 Trending: Justice Scalia Is Still Shaping Bombshell SCOTUS Rulings Years After His Death

2 Trending: NC Election Board Agrees To Fix Thousands Of Voter Registrations Lacking Required ID Numbers

3 Trending: NYT Accidentally Confesses There’s A Left-Wing Judicial Coup Against Trump

4 Trending: Stephen Colbert’s Nightly Democrat Extravaganza Collides With FCC’s ‘Equal Time’ Rule

‘Greatest Country In The World’: USA Hockey Player Promotes Patriotism After OT Win

Share Article on Facebook

Share Article on Twitter

Share Article on Truth Social

Share Article via Email

Some American athletes may be predisposed to trash their country on the world stage while competing in the 2026 Winter Olympics. But the same can’t be said for Team USA hockey player Quinn Hughes.

The 26-year-old defenseman wasn’t shy about voicing his love for America following his game-winning goal in Team USA’s overtime win against Sweden on Wednesday. The moment came when a reporter asked Hughes in a post-game press gaggle about what it was like playing in an atmosphere with fans displaying American flags all throughout the arena.

“It’s special. … I love the U.S.,” Hughes said. “It’s the greatest country in the world, so [I’m] happy to represent it here with these guys. … It’s really special.”

Wednesday’s game was by no means an easy win (2-1) for the Americans.

Following a scoreless first period, Team USA’s Dylan Larkin scored midway through the second period to put his team up 1-0. While America seemed poised for victory as the clock ticked closer to zero, Sweden’s decision to pull its goalie with roughly two minutes left in the third period gave the team the extra attacker needed to tie the game and send it to overtime.

Lucky for Team USA, Hughes pulled through when it mattered most and helped his team advance to the semifinals.

When asked what his team can take from its game against Sweden, Hughes expressed uncertainty but noted that “you just want to move on and be ready to go, and get your feet up the next 24 hours and then be ready to go.”

Team USA will play Slovakia on Friday, with the winner advancing to compete for the gold on Sunday. The loser will compete for the bronze against either Canada or Finland, who will play one another on Friday.

Quinn Hughes, who scored the game winning goal for the U.S. against Sweden after being on the ice for over 3 minutes in overtime: “It’s the greatest country in the world. Happy to represent it here with these guys and it’s really special.” 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/s74wkF8vBL— Greg Price (@greg_price11) February 19, 2026

Quinn Hughes, who scored the game winning goal for the U.S. against Sweden after being on the ice for over 3 minutes in overtime: “It’s the greatest country in the world. Happy to represent it here with these guys and it’s really special.” 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/s74wkF8vBL

Hughes’ public display of patriotism is a breath of fresh air for Americans subject to incessant America-bashing from their nation’s athletes.

As The Federalist recently reported, rather than expressing gratitude for being given the opportunity to compete at such an event, multiple U.S. competitors have spent their time attacking ICE for upholding America’s immigration laws. Team USA skier Hunter Hess took his criticisms a step further by saying he has “mixed emotions” about representing his home country at the Olympics.

“It brings up mixed emotions to represent the U.S. right now, I think. It’s a little hard. There’s obviously a lot going on that I’m not the biggest fan of, and I think a lot of people aren’t,” Hess said. “I think, for me, it’s more I’m representing my friends and family back home, the people that represented it before me, all the things that I believe are good about the U.S. If it aligns with my moral values, I feel like I’m representing it. Just because I’m wearing the flag doesn’t mean I represent everything that’s going on in the U.S.”

The Olympian later tried to clean up his remarks in an Instagram post.

[READ: Rooting Against Anti-American Olympians Is The Patriotic Thing To Do]

Such anti-American rhetoric doesn’t even include the fawning media coverage devoted to skier Eileen Gu, a San Francisco native and daughter of a Chinese immigrant mother who abandoned her birth country to compete on behalf of Beijing.

[READ: Globalism And America-Hating Destroy All The Fun Of Watching The Olympics]

Globalism And America-Hating Destroy All The Fun Of Watching The Olympics

‘The Intimidator’: NASCAR Honors Legend Dale Earnhardt 25 Years After He Died In Its Biggest Race

ESPN’s Philly Special Documents The Single Play That United A City

Tony Hinchcliffe Was Right

Ed O’Keefe’s Trump Derangement Is So Bad, Even The White House Press Corps Is Laughing At Him

EU Parliament Says Men Are Women And Anyone Can Get Pregnant

What The ‘Asian Grind Culture’ Panic Gets Wrong About American Education

Globalism And America-Hating Destroy All The Fun Of Watching The Olympics

Visit The Federalist on Facebook

Visit The Federalist on Twitter

Visit The Federalist on Instagram

Watch The Federalist on YouTube

View The Federalist RSS Feed

Listen to The Federalist Podcast

© 2026 The Federalist, A wholly independent division of FDRLST Media. All rights reserved.

Visit The Federalist on Facebook

Visit The Federalist on Twitter

Visit The Federalist on Instagram

Watch The Federalist on YouTube

View The Federalist RSS Feed

Listen to The Federalist Podcast


© The Federalist