Chris Mortensen reports that after an early technical difficulty in an online mock draft, the rest of the draft went smoothly and there will be nothing to worry about come Thursday night. (1:19)

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -- Denver Broncos president of football operations/general manager John Elway called the staff of his team's IT department "heroes'' in the run-up to this week's draft and said he expects any problems when the picks are officially made to be minimal.

Elway and representatives from every other team went through a dry run of the draft Monday morning with a two-round practice session. There were some early technical issues, which included a 2-and-a-half minute delay for the Cincinnati Bengals to make the first pick, a source told ESPN's Adam Schefter. Earlier reports had the delay as much longer.

There was also an issue with too many people on the call not using a mute function, but Elway said things eventually evened out.

"The draft went smooth, it got off to a little bit of a hiccup when we first started, but other than that it went really smooth,'' Elway said. "There were really no problems with it, so we got comfortable with it.

"It should be fine and go on without a glitch -- I'm sure there will be a couple glitches, but for the first time I thought it went pretty well,'' he added.

Green Bay Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst agreed with Elway, telling reporters that he thought the test run went smoothly all things considered.

"We got a lot of answers," he said. "That was the big thing, was kind of getting through this and finding out the answers how we really want to do this."

Elway said the virtual format, with teams having their personnel people, scouts and coaches all online from different locations, may impact how quickly teams can communicate in-house before trying to make a trade to move up or down the board.

The league has notified teams the clock will be stopped on their time to make picks in each round if technical issues occur.

"It will be interesting to see. The mock draft we had [Monday], everything was kind of predetermined, so it made it a little easier than I think it's going to be,'' Elway said. "Obviously, the time constraints, being virtual and not having everybody in the same room makes it more difficult, so that may lead to less trades. I still think there is going to be trades, if anything it makes us prepare a little bit harder to have an idea at each position of where we are right now ... [to] have an idea what the compensation may be.''

In the end, Elway said, it may actually make the draft more predictable for teams in their preparations overall because "I think maybe people are sitting more in their spots than they have in the past.''

With the stay-at-home orders across the country as well as other travel restrictions, the NFL did not have its March meetings this year. Those meetings with every head coach and general manager in one place are often fertile ground for rumors.

Elway said he felt it may have cut down on the usual amount of disinformation to sift through.

"If anything, there's less chatter and it makes things less confusing,'' Elway said. " ... There's always a lot of smokescreens out there this time of year. If anything, it may have eliminated some of those smokescreens.''

ESPN's Rob Demovsky contributed to this report.