It was anything but.
At one point, Cooper heard the voice of Edmonton Journal writer Jim Matheson, whose plaque hangs at the Hockey Hall of Fame as a winner of the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award for bringing honor to journalism and hockey. Cooper couldn't see him.
"Jim, did you ask that question on the other side of the fence?" Cooper said. "Are you close by?"
They laughed together, but separately.
Matheson was at his condo, 10 minutes from the hotel meeting room the Lightning and the Dallas Stars used to preview the Cup Final on Friday. Game 1 is at Rogers Place in Edmonton, the hub city for the best-of-7 series, on Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, SN, TVAS).
RELATED: [Complete Stanley Cup Final coverage]
No media were in person at Media Day, just as no media have been in the bubble and no fans have been in the stands this postseason because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Normally, reporters crowd around each other and their subjects at Media Day, jostling for position, shouting questions. This time, whether close by or across the continent, they did what they've had to do for months: ask questions via video conference.
"It's different," said Stars center Tyler Seguin, who had been through Media Day at the Cup Final with the Boston Bruins in 2011 and 2013. "Someone just said to me outside that this probably must be better, just having to go in a room. But honestly, you definitely miss those days. … There's so much media and cameras in your face, and that atmosphere's buzzing. It's definitely surreal."
Surreal is an understatement.
After the season was paused March 12 due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus, the NHL and the NHL Players' Association came up with a Return to Play Plan with an unprecedented 24-team postseason tournament.
Twelve teams from the Eastern Conference went into the bubble in Toronto on July 26. Twelve teams from the Western Conference went into the bubble in Edmonton the same day. Now, 55 days later, we're down to two finalists.
At the time of year we should be playing the preseason, we have two southern American teams playing the Cup Final in a northern Canadian city.
This is historic.
You have to go back 70 years to find the last time Cup Final games were played at a neutral site. In 1950, thanks to a scheduling conflict with a circus at Madison Square Garden, the New York Rangers hosted the Detroit Red Wings in Games 2 and 3 of the Cup Final at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto. At least there were fans in the stands.