The Devils have continued to monitor Elias' progress and general manager Ray Shero said there is no timetable to when a decision needs to be made. Elias and Shero converse on a weekly basis regarding his progress, and Elias still has a locker stall, attends team meetings, receives treatment and remains a part of the organization even though he is not under contract.
"Last year was hard for me," Elias said. "Not so much because I was hurting or couldn't play to my potential or play that many games, it was more not being able to play with the group of guys we had, play for the coaching staff we had. I know I would have really enjoyed that because this is the type of hockey that suits me.
"Obviously, I wish I was 20 years younger but that's not happening, so we adjust and deal with the situation the best way we can. Those are all the next steps and I'm taking a month-by-month approach."
Elias has played 18 full NHL seasons, all with New Jersey. He was limited to 16 games last season, when had two goals and eight points. He played the final three games of the regular season.
What does Elias need to have happen in order to begin practicing with the Devils in earnest?
"It's steps you have to take on the ice and practicing by yourself but even before [training camp] started, I skated with the guys and was doing things on my own," Elias said. "The tempo I skate at is not even close to the way the guys practice or play games. I try and simulate some of the stuff. I take it one week at a time, do conditioning stuff, lapping, implement stopping and starting. You kind of do that and if you're OK, then eventually you say you wouldn't mind maybe jumping in and seeing how a real practice feels.
"That's when I might say, 'Holy cow, these guys are way too good.' So the decision might be easier."