When Jack Hughes scored the game-winning goal for Team USA at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics, he tossed his stick and gloves in the air, ripped off his helmet and skated toward the penalty box, where he was mobbed by his teammates. But one important piece of memorabilia was overlooked.

“Honestly, I have no idea where that puck went,” Hughes said on TNT’s NHL Postgame show earlier this week. “I know who doesn’t have it is me. I sure as hell don’t have it.”

Hughes finally has an answer. A spokesperson for the International Ice Hockey Federation has confirmed that the puck that scored the game-winning goal from the U.S.-Canada gold medal game in Milan is currently at the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto. The Hall of Fame confirmed it was in its possession, as well as the puck from Megan Keller’s game-winning goal in the women’s gold medal game and jerseys from Hilary Knight, Connor McDavid and William Nylander, and that all items will be on display “very soon.”

USA Hockey did not reply to a request for comment.

In an email, the IIHF stated that the puck was immediately secured after the game ended. Typically, significant items are “are typically documented, authenticated and preserved in coordination with the appropriate stakeholders,” the spokesperson said. “In this case, the puck was designated for archival preservation with the HHOF to ensure its long-term safekeeping and historical recognition.”

The documentation was done by both the IIHF and the HHOF. The NHL, which has its own authentication process, is not involved with equipment at the Olympics.

Experts vary on how much a piece of memorabilia like that would fetch on the open market. Heritage Auctions pegged it to be worth between $20,000 and $40,000, while Goldin (formerly Goldin Auctions) and Steiner Sports had the prospective value of the puck in the six-figures range, at $100,000 and $500,000 respectively.

“Hockey is so far below baseball it’s criminal,” Ken Goldin, founder and CEO of his namesake auction house, said. “It’s not the ‘Miracle on Ice’ or a major upset, but it’s the first gold in 46 years.”

If the puck were ever to come to market, there’s at least one potential billionaire buyer—who happens to own the team Hughes plays for. “Happy to bid on it!” David Blitzer, co-owner of the New Jersey Devils, said.

(This story has been updated in the third paragraph with comment from the Hockey Hall of Fame.)