After getting bought out by the Minnesota Wild, Suter came to Dallas and had a great season.
In fact, the change of scenery might have been the best thing for the veteran defenseman.
He stepped away from the leadership spotlight that was very bright in Minnesota, and he joined forces with old friend Joe Pavelski, and that combination seemed to help his performance. Suter was second on the Stars in time on ice at 23:39 (over a minute per game more than he had in Minnesota his previous season), tallied 32 points, and was second in puck possession stats for defensemen at 51.0 percent SAT.
All in all, it was an impressive year for the 37-year-old who came in at a cap hit of $3.65 million, which has to be seen as a bargain right now considering his time on ice.
The only criticism might be that he didn't look as strong in the playoffs, despite playing 22:38 per game. His SAT dropped all the way to 38.8 percent in the seven games against Calgary, although most of the team saw a huge drop as the Flames dominated puck possession and shots on goal in that series.