Once it was time to hit the ice, Duchene exchanged good-natured quips with some of his former teammates. His emotions became more serious and heartfelt midway through the first period when the Senators played a video thanking him for his time in Ottawa.
As the crowd cheered, Senators general manager Pierre Dorion, the architect of the trade, was clapping up in the Ottawa management box. The two sides parted amicably. Duchene desperately wants to play in the postseason; Dorion found a way to give him a shot at it.
"That was great," Duchene said of the video. "Grateful to the [Senators] for that. That was first class. Closing another chapter of my career. They have a bright future."
Duchene hopes he does too. The Blue Jackets (34-23-3) are in third place in the Metropolitan Division with 71 points, one point ahead of the Carolina Hurricanes.
"[The playoffs] are what I'm looking for," he said. "That's what gets me up every morning now for sure … I've been fortunate to have been on some international teams and some big tournaments. But obviously tonight's win puts us in (a playoff spot) and we want to keep it going."
Duchene had time to meet up with his family after the game. There was an embrace with wife Ashley, a kiss for six-week-old son Beau and hugs for mom Chris and dad Vince. Then he scurried off to catch the team bus and a flight to Columbus, where the Blue Jackets play the San Jose Sharks on Saturday (5 p.m. ET; FS-O, NBCSCA, NHL.TV) and the cannon awaits.