His debut delayed more than a year by an NHL lockout, Suter debuted with the Predators on Oct. 5, 2005 against those same San Jose Sharks.
He skated in his 1,000th NHL game Thursday as the Wild hosted the Los Angeles Kings. And like he was at Suter's first NHL game, there was Fenton watching proudly as Suter became the 325th player -- and 109th defenseman -- to play 1,000 NHL games.
For Fenton, Suter will always be a little more special than any of the multitude of great players he drafted with the Predators during nearly two decades with the club.
Suter was the first player he ever selected as the man running Nashville's draft table. The Predators picked 13 players, including Suter's long-time defensive partner Shea Weber in the second round, that same year.
But it's Suter's status as the first that will always have them attached at the hip.
"No question," Fenton said. "I'm thrilled. It should be a really special moment to see his 1,000th and hopefully many more."
"He drafted me. He scouted me before I was drafted. Now he's the GM of [this] team," Suter said. "It's kind of neat how it came full circle."
Fenton remembers the circumstance which solidified Suter as the guy he wanted to pick in the draft that year, scouting Suter, who was with the U.S. National Under-18 Team at the Under-18 World Championship in Yaroslavl, Russia.
U.S. coaches were intent on teaching their defensemen to block shots, using correct timing to trap the puck between their shin pads and the ice.
Suter was quite good at it, but on this day, he was a victim of some bad luck.
Alex Ovechkin entered the Russian offensive zone and whiffed on an initial slapshot. Suter, who had dropped to a knee to block it, got back to his feet, and was only able to get halfway back down as Ovechkin took another rip.
Ovechkin didn't miss the second time, and Suter blocked the shot square, but not with his shin pad. Instead, he took the blast in the leg, right above the knee.