If Team Canada wins, Tavares will be in uniform. He will have his equipment on. He will have fully earned the moment.
It's difficult for him not to think about it, even though the result is what all hockey players try to avoid thinking about.
"I think everybody's human," he said. "We certainly know we're one game from being there. But I think as the day goes on, you just try to approach it as normal as possible, try to prepare as normal as you can. We have to be at our best, we're playing against a very good team. They gave us a really good test last game, so we know they're going to be prepared.
"You just try to get into the flow of the game, one shift at a time and being ready for that next shift and executing. Hopefully it all ends up to getting you the result you want."
If there is a day when Team Canada needed to focus on process more than any other, it would be with a World Cup championship within its grasp. All the external distractions and thoughts of winning another best-on-best title could be heightened for Team Canada.
Some, like forward Logan Couture, don't anticipate having any problems managing it. He said the only time he had trouble getting to sleep for his game day nap was before his first NHL game on Oct. 25, 2009, and that includes playing in the Stanley Cup Final with the San Jose Sharks three months ago.