"You go from playing with the [Vladimir] Tarasenkos and the [Alexander] Steens [in St. Louis] and now I get to go play with Crosby, Malkin and that [Jake] Guentzel kid is starting to light it up," Reaves said. "I'm definitely excited. I'm obviously very honored and humbled that a team that good and that's won the last two years wanted me on their team and traded for me. I'm excited to do whatever they need me to do to help them win a third one.
"Sometimes you look at trades and sometimes it's dumping salary, sometimes it's just getting rid of a player. I think the feeling was however I can go in there and help, they wanted me that they traded for me. I don't think this is a getting-rid-of-me kind of move. It's something they thought they needed in their lineup and I'm excited to bring it. ... I talked to Crosby a couple times, a couple texts from a few of the other guys."
Reaves was on the ice Friday with former teammates and other NHL players getting some work in before the start of training camp. After spending the past seven seasons in St. Louis, Reaves said it was tough to initially process being traded.
A fifth-round pick (No. 156) in the 2005 NHL Draft, Reaves has 51 points (27 goals, 24 assists) and 695 penalty minutes in 419 games.
"I don't know if it's just that I've spent my whole career here [in St. Louis," he said. "I think more so that I've been here for so long, I have roots here now. You make a lot of friends inside and outside the organization. You create a fan base for yourself. There's a lot of tough things about leaving the organization … but that's the business part. I always said I've never been traded in any League, but eventually the business side was going to catch up to me."