DeCosta said the Ravens are putting the finishing touches to their draft board this week. And if all else fails trying to submit their picks, they'll resort to a phone call.

"I would probably just get on my phone, call [NFL Vice President of Player Personnel] Ken Fiore and say, 'Kenny, this is who we're picking,'" DeCosta said. "... We've done a really good job preparing for all of the different possibilities. … Coach [John] Harbaugh only lives about maybe 150 yards away from me. If anything really, really bad happens, we can kind of meet halfway to talk about our strategies."

PFF: Ravens Have Most Opportunity for Rookie Wide Receivers

It's almost a guarantee the Ravens will take a wide receiver at some point during the draft. According to Pro Football Focus' Kevin Cole, they have the most opportunity for rookie talent at the position.

"The Ravens are projected to be one of the least productive receiver groups in the NFL, as the team relies heavily on the run and Lamar Jackson relies more heavily on tight ends," Cole wrote. "Marquise 'Hollywood' Brown is the team's only viable wide receiver according to ADP, but even he doesn't crack the top-30 in terms of ADP.

"[T]he roster is wide open for the addition of a higher-volume receiver to work underneath while Brown takes the top off of defenses."

The Ravens doubled-dipped at receiver with Brown and Miles Boykin last year. With five picks in the first three rounds, they've set themselves up with the opportunity to do it again.

The draft's top three receivers, Jerry Jeudy, CeeDee Lamb, and Henry Ruggs will likely be off the board by the first 15 picks. There's also recent buzz that LSU's Justin Jefferson is very high on draft boards.

The Athletic's Sheil Kapadia predicted the Ravens will select Colorado's Laviska Shenault in the first round, but his colleague, Jeff Zrebiec, doesn't think the Ravens necessarily need a receiver in the first two rounds.

"I don't think that's a formality, just because the wide receiver depth in this class is so strong and teams feel like they can find a starting-caliber receiver as late as the third round," Zrebiec wrote. "It drives fans nuts to hear this, but I do think they'll stick to their board and not chase a position. However, they'll go into the draft with receivers they are willing to take in the first round, if the board falls in a certain way, and in the second round as well. Not sure they'll double up that early, but there's certainly a decent chance they take one in the first two rounds."

Other receivers who Penn Live's Aaron Kasinitz highlighted as potential fits at 28 include Arizona State's Brandon Aiyuk, Baylor's Denzel Mims, Clemson's Tee Higgins, and USC's Michael Pittman Jr.

Could Ravens Be in the Market for Jamal Adams Again?

Before last year's trade deadline, the Ravens were reportedly eyeing a trade for New York Jets safety Jamal Adams. A deal never happened, but Baltimore could have another chance at acquiring the All-Pro safety this offseason.

According to ESPN's Adam Schefter, Adams isn't expected to participate in the Jets' voluntary virtual offseason program and the two sides haven't made any progress on an extension.