St. Louis joined forwards Vincent Lecavalier, Brad Richards, Fredrik Modin, defenseman Dan Boyle and goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin as the Lightning core under coach John Tortorella, now coach of the Blue Jackets. They made the Stanley Cup Playoffs in 2003 for the first time in six seasons and won the Cup in 2004, when they defeated the Flames in seven games.
Looking back, St. Louis said it was a special group of young players who had no fear.
"We were just growing up," he said. "We knew the game, but we didn't know the game like we know it now. We were just competitors. We were proud people, and we wanted to win. Those guys are unbelievable hockey players. I was thinking about that this the other day. I won the MVP in the [2003-04] regular season. Brad wins the [Conn Smythe Trophy] in the playoffs. Vinny was the MVP of the 2004 World Cup. And we were all on the same team. When did that happen?"
St. Louis won the Hart Trophy as MVP, the Art Ross Trophy as the NHL's top scorer (94 points), and the Lester B. Pearson Award (now the Ted Lindsay Award) as the most outstanding player as selected by the NHL Players' Association in 2003-04. He won the Art Ross Trophy again in 2012-13 with 60 points in 48 games, and the Lady Byng Trophy three times (2009, 2010, 2013).
He is the Lightning's all-time leader in points (953), assists (588), shorthanded goals (28), game-winning goals (64) and power-play points (300), and his eight hat tricks are tied with Steven Stamkos for most in Tampa Bay history. His 365 goals are second to Lecavalier's 383.