Contrary to Beaucage's sentiment that Isabella's size shouldn't be an issue for the Ravens, Sports Illustrated's Andy Benoit and Gary Gramling believe size just might matter.

"Whoever they find must have enough girth and toughness to block; offensive coordinator Greg Roman's creative run designs can't flourish unless defenders are handled on the perimeter," wrote Benoit and Gramling, who assessed that wide receiver is the Ravens' biggest need. "This doesn't mean the Ravens need big receivers, per se, but they could shy away from small receivers."

Burning Draft Question for Ravens

Speaking of the Ravens and wide receivers, NFL.com analyst Elliot Harrison came up with "one burning question for each AFC team" regarding the draft, and -- surprise! -- his question for the Ravens is: "Which playmaking receivers will be available at No. 22?"

"The Ravens might have one of the top players at that position fall to them," Harrison wrote. "More importantly: At some point, Lamar Jackson is going to have to beat teams downfield. Not just occasionally, but on the reg. This group went after three WRs in free agency last year. Willie Snead is the only one left.

"It's time to inject that spot with youth ... and top-shelf talent. How about a freakish athletic specimen like D.K. Metcalf? Or a playmaking dynamo like Marquise Brown? It's not hard to imagine the board falling in a way where Baltimore has its pick of the WR litter."

Benoit and Gramling wrote: "The Ravens will have a shot at a big receiver, whether it's super-sized slot receiver A.J. Brown of Ole Miss, contested-catch artist N'Keal Harry of Arizona State, or the hulking Hakeem Butler of Iowa State. All of them will be assets blocking in the run game."

Ravens Second Most Likely to Trade Down

In keeping with today's draft theme, there's been much speculation among NFL pundits that the Ravens will trade down in the first round. In ESPN's Dan Graziano's rankings of teams most likely to make trades, he has the Ravens as the second-most likely to trade down.

"The Ravens … are always on the lookout for a deal," Graziano wrote. "They need to fill a lot of holes on defense, and if the high-impact guys are drying up by No. 22, Baltimore has shown that it's nimble enough in the draft to slide down a couple of spots and maximize value."

At the Ravens' pre-draft press conference, General Manager Eric DeCosta acknowledged the team's penchant for manufacturing picks and said this year's draft is a deep one.