The city of Canton and the Pro Football Hall of Fame are eyeing 2020 for a shot at hosting the NFL Draft.

The second phase of the renovation of Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium is on track to be finished by this summer. Ground was broken earlier this year on the Hall of Fame Village project, a $600 million complex adjacent to the stadium and Hall of Fame that’s considered the key to hosting big events such as the draft.

Two people with knowledge of the process told The Athletic that construction deadlines and other plans have been set with the idea that the Hall of Fame Village could host at least part of the draft in 2020. Hall of Fame officials submitted a formal bid in 2015 to host in either 2019 or 2020, and Hall of Fame president David Baker told reporters then that he couldn’t guarantee that Canton would host.

“But we are going to fight for it,” Baker said.

Canton and the Hall of Fame have eyed 2019 as a potential date to host a round of NFL owners’ meetings, and that could serve as a way to show off the new facilities and gain momentum for a bid to host the draft. Per the Canton Repository, the Hall of Fame Village will eventually include a hotel, entertainment venue, up to 20,000 square feet of meeting space, retail space and a Center for Excellence that could cover as much as 134,000 square feet.

The NFL plans to continue to move the draft around, and Canton has plenty of company in wanting to host the draft. Sports Business Journal reported recently that 23 cities plan to bid on the chance to host the 2018 draft, and that the NFL is examining the possibility of turning the draft into a multi-city event.

That Canton could be a co-host with other cities and also could share some draft hosting duties with Cleveland are among the ideas that ultimately could be pursued. According to the Associated Press, more than 100,000 attended draft-related activities last weekend in Philadelphia.

New York hosted the draft for 51 years before Chicago hosted in 2015, then again in 2016, before Philadelphia hosted this year. Among the cities showing interest in future drafts have been Green Bay, Indianapolis, Jacksonville and Frisco, Texas, home of Cowboys’ owner Jerry Jones’ sparking new team headquarters, The Star.

Baker had previously said that he envisioned 2019, the NFL’s 100th season, as a “special time” and a great opportunity for Canton to host the draft. A 2020 draft would celebrate the league’s 100th anniversary.