Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane, who played with Crawford for 13 seasons, said Crawford's contributions went well beyond stopping pucks.
"He was an unbelievable player and obviously a big part of our championships here, a big part of the organization for the past 10-15 years," Kane said Saturday. "He's great guy to be around, he always seemed to be in a good mood, always competed in practice. He helped me get better just in practice. Obviously, I still feel he's playing at a really high level, going back to last year in the playoffs. I guess just wish him all the best. Obviously, we'll have conversations and talk to him, but sometimes there are bigger things than hockey and wish him all the best in the future."
Crawford, who missed 80 games during the previous two seasons because of concussions, was 16-20-3 with a 2.77 GAA, .917 save percentage and one shutout in 40 games (39 starts) last season.
Devils coach Lindy Ruff said he was looking forward to having Crawford play for New Jersey this season.
"My initial thoughts are disappointment," Ruff said. "Corey's had an incredible career. conversations that I've had with him, I understand where he's at and I think the fact that he's had a great career and he's come to this point, you deal with it and you move on. it's something that obviously was deep in his mind.
"We all had conversations with him, you know, started with [Devils general manager] Tom [Fitzgerald], myself, [Devils VP and Hall of Fame goalie Martin Brodeur]. You know, you just understand where he was at. I think those initial conversations are, 'How can we help you, is there something we can change?' all those type of conversations. ... But it really wasn't about any of that."