SAN JOSE — How exactly did the Ottawa Senators end up in a situation where they were forced to part ways with their captain and arguably the best defenceman in the world?

According to Erik Karlsson, you’ll have to ask ownership or management. He would do it himself, but the last time he sat down and talked with owner Eugene Melnyk or general manager Pierre Dorion was 10 months ago.

“I haven’t spoken to any of them really since November of last year when they asked for my no-trade list,” Karlsson told Postmedia News in a one-on-one interview on Thursday. “That’s the way it is, I guess. That’s the only situation I know that’s been like this. It was what it was. I was there to play hockey and I did that to the best of my ability with what we had. That’s all that I worried about.

“Everything else around it is above my pay grade. That’s not my question to ask.”

That the two sides went nearly a year without talking before Karlsson was ultimately shipped off to San Jose for an underwhelming package of prospects, picks and depth players, illustrates just how toxic the relationship between Karlsson and the Senators had become in Ottawa.

Karlsson spent nine years in Ottawa. He won two Norris Trophies with the Senators and led the team to the doorstep to the Stanley Cup final in 2017. The city was his home. It still is, with he and his wife, Melinda, deciding to hang onto their house for now.

And yet, when it was finally time to go, the team sent him packing without much more than a wave of the hand.

Did it hurt?

“It’s disappointing,” said Karlsson. “I was there for nine seasons. I never had any issues with the group of guys that we had in that locker room playing hockey. Every one that we had was extremely professional and tried to do the best with what we had. Everything else that went around it is something that we couldn’t control. All that other stuff is a question for someone else that’s above the players.”

It’s no secret that Karlsson probably priced himself out of the small-market city when he said he wouldn’t be willing to take a hometown discount to stay with the Senators.

“When I go to market, I’m going to get what I’m worth,” he told the Ottawa Sun in December. “And it’s going to be no less.”

Those comments came shortly after the Senators had traded away Kyle Turris following an unsuccessful contract negotiation, where Turris criticized ownership for not wanting to pay him what he was worth. At the same time, Karlsson made it clear that he was willing to return to Ottawa for the final season of his contract, though it appears the door had shut closed on him signing an extension beyond that.

“I’m sure that people are wondering what actually happened, but that’s not something that I’m going to get into,” said Karlsson. “I think everyone’s entitled to their own opinion. At the end of the day, they traded me.

“I have one more year on my deal. It was not my decision. I had nothing to do with it. It was part of the business. I have to respect their decision, whether I agree with it or not. That’s the reality we’re in right now. I try not to read too much into it. As I said, if I were to left next summer then it probably would have been different. My job at the end of the day is to play hockey for whatever team I am with. I did that for nine years and I think I did it to the best of my ability.”

So now, he moves on. He’s only been in San Jose for two days, but the differences between here and where he came from could not be more different. And it has nothing to do with the weather. After all, it’s just as warm in Ottawa right now as it is in northern California.