"The world," the Dallas Stars captain said.
He'd likely have the same answer in any year.
This isn't any year, though. One of the main storylines during this Stanley Cup Final between the Stars and Tampa Bay Lightning is that it will be contested entirely in Edmonton, with no fans inside Rogers Place.
It's historic in that sense.
But none of that matters to the Stars and Lightning, not with the dream so close to becoming reality.
As different as 2020 has been because of the coronavirus pandemic, so much about the Stanley Cup Final, which starts with Game 1 of the best-of-7 series on Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, SN, TVAS), is the same as it is every year, starting with the notion that the elation of winning will be almost impossible to contain and the heartbreak of losing almost unbearable to live with.
"We're obviously in a bubble in Edmonton, but for the most part the hockey is the same, the level of hockey, the compete level, it's all the same," said Stars forward Corey Perry, who won the Stanley Cup with the Anaheim Ducks in 2007. "When we came back from the pause we were thinking that we were coming to Edmonton to win the Stanley Cup."
Forward Patrick Maroon is the only player on the Lightning who has won the Stanley Cup, doing so last season with the St. Louis Blues. Perry and center Tyler Seguin (2011, Boston Bruins) are the only players on Dallas who have won the Cup.
Neither coach, Rick Bowness of the Stars and Jon Cooper of the Lightning, has won the Cup, though they coached together in the 2015 Stanley Cup Final, when Tampa Bay lost in six games to the Chicago Blackhawks.
Cooper was the coach, Bowness his top assistant.
"I'm probably not sitting here today without the help of Rick Bowness," Cooper said.
Bowness said, "We had a talk about it again this morning, we're in the Stanley Cup Final, we're one of the two best teams in the National Hockey League this year, so just keep the focus on that. We're here to win the Stanley Cup. All of the things outside of it have changed and it's all different. … The goal is the same."
So are the nerves ahead of Game 1.
"It has to give you an extra push," Lightning forward Alex Killorn said. "You don't know how many opportunities you're going to get at this thing."