"So far, I've just been in a cast for three weeks now," Suter said on Monday. "This Thursday will be three weeks and I've got to do another week with the cast on. And then a couple more months without any pressure on it. I can't walk so it's going to be a long process."
The complexity of Suter's injury makes an exact timeline for his recovery difficult to gauge.
He was in a hard cast and on crutches at the rink on Monday but has a scooter to help him move around at home. Once the cast is removed, Suter can put no weight on his foot for a couple more months.
"We got a CT scan last week, but it's only two weeks in, so you can't really tell much from that," Suter said. "I think we'll do another CT scan in 10 or 11 more days and hopefully we'll start seeing something."
Suter said he plans on beginning upper-body workouts in the next couple weeks, which will hopefully keep him in fine shape for when he can begin lower-body workouts and an eventual return to the ice late in the summer or early this fall.
The goal for him is to be on the ice when the team comes together for training camp in September.
Parise's summer should resemble one much closer to normal.
Barely a week removed from when the injury occurred, Parise said he was sore but otherwise showed no other signs of his injury. He simply needs time; the original diagnosis kept him out week-to-week, but with the team's season completed, he needs patience.