"I like the mix of our team. I think we have a little bit of everything. We're big and strong, we're tough and we have some skill with speed up front."
The seeds for the trade were planted in April when Senators general Pierre Dorion called Rangers GM Jeff Gorton to ask about his working relationship with Rangers president Glen Sather, who was the GM prior to Gorton. In April, Bryan Murray shifted from Senators GM to an adviser role, with Dorion replacing him.
"I probably have the same kind of working relationship with Bryan," Dorion said. "We started talking and I said, 'Glen and Bryan have never made a deal, according to Bryan. So how about you and I make a deal?'"
Brassard, born in Hull, Quebec, across the Ottawa River from Ottawa, said he's looking forward to playing close to home.
"Playing in front of my friends and family is going to give me another edge to my game," he said. "I think I'm in the prime of my career right now and I think that's one of the reasons [the Senators] came to get me. I want to show everyone they made a good choice."
Dorion said having a player play in his hometown "definitely adds something. But if Derick had been from Vancouver, I don't think it would have mattered."