"I'm definitely keeping an open mind," 33-year-old Scown said. "We also had high expectations in the women's eight [which finished fourth] at Rio. I'd love nothing more than to help get that boat on the podium in Tokyo."
Bond and Murray are pressing pause in their undefeated international partnership across 69 races, 24 regattas and eight seasons. They won two Olympic golds and six world championships in the discipline, in addition to their 2007 coxless four and 2014 coxed pair titles.
Murray will resume training after minor surgery on his knee, but will be unavailable for competition; Bond will take a 12-month break.
Both have hinted that joining the eight is an option beyond that. Bond's also seen as a single sculling candidate, a discipline in which he has beaten Drysdale at national level.
His cycling talent, finishing eighth in the Tour of Southland general classification this month, complicates the picture further.
Drysdale won his second Olympic gold by less than the width of bow ball at Rio, becoming New Zealand's oldest Olympic champion at 37 years, eight months and 25 days.
If he won at Tokyo, Drysdale would take over from Brit Harry Blackstaffe (London, 1908) as the oldest single sculling champion at a Games. Negotiations will also be required if he wants to continue his relationship with coach Dick Tonks, who parted ways with the governing body in acrimonious fashion during the Rio campaign.
Other former world champions having a spell include double scullers Zoe Stevenson and Eve Macfarlane, and quadruple sculler George Bridgewater.
Rowing New Zealand's development programme suggests a school of new athletes are ready to advance their Tokyo causes next year. Kiwis earned four medals at this year's under-23 world championships in Rotterdam, including a gold to the coxed four.
Upon return, any absent athletes will attend selection trials next September.
Crews might face some adjustment by then. World governing body FISA is convening an extraordinary congress in February to debate how they adjust the ratio of men's and women's Olympic crews from 8:6 to 7:7. Any proposed changes need to be ratified by the International Olympic Committee in June.
"We're comfortable with everyone taking a break," chief executive Simon Peterson said. "It's the right time, like what Mahe did after London in 2012."
Rowing New Zealand presents its case for future funding to High Performance Sport New Zealand on Tuesday. They aimed for five medals and returned three at Rio, but exceeded expectations in each of the other three years.