Marr and his staff have been forced to navigate through some very unusual times. The NHL season was paused March 12 due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus, and the regular seasons for the CHL and the United States Hockey League were cancelled, as were the NCAA hockey playoffs, and seasons in Europe. Central Scouting's final meetings were held virtually for the first time, and the NHL Scouting Combine, which had been scheduled for June 1-6 in Buffalo, was canceled.
And there still is uncertainty as to when next season will start for leagues around the world.
"Officials from the CHL, USHL and USA Hockey have provided updates that plans are in place to hold the 2020-21 season and those plans will be based on continually evolving contingencies with the pandemic circumstances," Marr said. "All have confirmed that an NHL top prospects game (one for CHL players, one United States-born players) would be included at an agreed-upon date."
Here are Five Questions with … Dan Marr:
How excited are you to learn the winner of the NHL Draft Lottery?
"The uniqueness of the 2020 NHL Draft lottery is exciting for the NHL and its fans in part that it was re-configured into a two-phase process with the initial lottery phase resulting in the No. 1 selection going to a yet to be determined club. The fact that the eight clubs eliminated in the [Stanley Cup Qualifiers] all have equal odds at winning the lottery makes it truly unique and the fans in each of those eliminated cities will be excited knowing they have a 1-in-8 chance to be awarded the No. 1 selection."
Can you sum up how strange a season this has been for the scouting industry, and how this experience could change the way scouting is done in the future?
"The scouting landscape, like the entire hockey industry and global community, is dealing with a surreal situation in which the immediate future is an unknown. In order to proceed with the 2020 NHL Draft, NHL Central Scouting and NHL clubs embraced various technical means to communicate remotely and continue to prepare for the draft. Some of these same methods that were introduced into conducting draft interviews, meetings and rankings may be incorporated for future use. I know that for NHL Central Scouting, it has provided an option for us to utilize technical means to remotely produce some of our year-end reporting that typically had been conducted via in-person meetings, and many NHL scouting directors have conveyed similar observations."