The Niagara Falls Review

Hockey GMs set to monitor ‘really interestin­g’ remote draft

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON AND DONNA SPENCER

Brad Treliving will be paying close attention to the National Football League draft.

And not because he’s curious to see if Joe Burrow does indeed go No. 1 to the Cincinnati Bengals or where fellow quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa winds up.

The general manager of the Calgary Flames is planning to focus on how his football counterpar­ts deal with the realities of their world during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The NFL closed all 32 of its team facilities in March and cancelled the live, in-person draft spectacle originally scheduled for Las Vegas. Executives will instead submit picks remotely from their homes, away from the so-called “war rooms” where decisions are usually made alongside scouts and other members of the front office.

The selections for Thursday’s first round will still be announced to a television audience by commission­er Roger Goodell, but he’s going to be holed up at his residence outside New York City.

“It’s going to be really interestin­g,” Treliving said. “I know the NHL is watching what they’re doing closely. We may be following their lead.”

The National Hockey League draft was set to be held June 26-27 at the Bell Centre in Montreal before the novel coronaviru­s brought society to a screeching halt last month.

Forced to suspend its season, the league last month postponed the draft and its yearly combine, which was scheduled for early June in Buffalo.

The draft lottery was also postponed.

With so much hanging on the advice and direction of medical experts — including whether or not the 2019-20 campaign can be completed — when and how the NHL draft is eventually held remains a fluid situation, but it’s safe to assume things will be scaled back.

It could end up like the NFL with proceeding­s taking place remotely or, if social distancing guidelines are relaxed, might look similar to the 2005 NHL draft that was moved to an Ottawa hotel ballroom in late July following the lockout that wiped out the previous season.

Treliving believes, given the current situation, it could be hard to get teams to physically gather in one place.

“Certainly our draft is going to be remote, that would be safe to say,” he said. “For sure I’m going to be watching (the NFL draft) and doing a lot of homework on not only that, but different ideas of how we could potentiall­y do our draft.”

The NFL held a mock draft Monday in hopes of ironing out any technical issues. Officially, only a few minor hiccups arose, but some anonymous sources told The Associated Press there were glitches at the outset when the Bengals were making the first selection.

“Certainly it has been interestin­g,” Winnipeg Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayo­ff said of the NFL’s preparatio­ns. “We are living in a different time here right now. We’ve had lots of different video sessions internally, getting together with scouts over the different platforms that are available.”

Montreal assistant GM Trevor Timmins, who oversees his club’s amateur scouting department, said NHL teams and fans should be able to glean plenty of informatio­n from how things play out for football.

“We can learn a lot from that — what works, what doesn’t work,” he said. “I’ve been in contact with my NFL contacts discussing how they are preparing with the limitation­s.”

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Brad Treliving

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