American Football

Ravens Draft 2024: Reacting to Ravens’ Day 3 picks

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL: OCT 07 Syracuse at North Carolina
Photo by David Jensen/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Beatdown crew react to the Ravens’ Day 3 selections of the 2024 NFL Draft.

Round 4, Pick No. 113 — Devontez Walker, WR, North Carolina

‘Tez’ represents an outstanding selection at the intersection of need and value. With an impressive 9.76 relative athletic score, Walker boasts the length and deep speed to thrive as a linear receiver in the Ravens offense. His superb ball tracking flashes on tape but he could stand to improve his route precision at the next level. Schematically, his field stretching ability should help alleviate extra bodies from the box, benefitting the rushing attack and short/intermediate passing game.

Walker’s fit on Baltimore’s depth chart is also ideal. He should serve as the tertiary perimeter receiver behind Rashod Bateman and Zay Flowers during his rookie season, while Nelson Agholor shares slot responsibilities with the terrific tight end duo. General manager Eric DeCosta has done a masterful job adding high-ceiling prospects at high-value positions of need throughout the 2024 NFL draft.

– Vasilis Lericos


Day 3 is for boom-bust picks and value. The Ravens may have landed two booms in Devontez Walker and T.J. Tampa, two players with traits that translate to the NFL level. Walker’s the type of receiver who with a bit of polishing can find a niche in an NFL offense. After all, he’s the only receiver who got the better of their first-round pick, Nate Wiggins, with a reception of 20+ yards in 2023. Route-work with Zay Flowers and Co. could make a big impact for Walker to become a serviceable WR3.

Kyle Phoenix


The Ravens took advantage of how the board played out in Round 4 and landed two high-value selections. Devontez Walker is an ideal fit at wide receiver given his deep-threat and contested catch ability. He will complement Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman well to give Lamar Jackson another playmaker.

– Frank Platko


I love both of these picks for the Ravens here to kick off Day 3 and both are steals in terms of where they were being projected to go and where they ultimately landed. Devontez Walker is a big-bodied home-run threat who adds a field-stretching and contested catch presence on the boundary and would’ve come off the board in the top 100 picks in most years. His hand can be inconsistent sometimes and his route running needs some refinement, but both are correctable and he’ll be able to contribute right away as he works to improve them.

Joshua Reed


Round 4, Pick No. 130 — T.J. Tampa, DB, Iowa State

Baltimore does it again, adding another excellent prospect with their second fourth round selection. Tampa was projected to be a second round pick by several analysts due to his enticing size and press-man potential. Despite lacking elite long-speed, T.J. posted impressive coverage metrics and offers plus instincts as a zone defender.

The Ravens needed to fill the void left by Ronald Darby’s departure at outside cornerback and between first rounder Nate Wiggins and now Tampa, DeCosta has outdone himself. New defensive coordinator Zach Orr will enter the 2024 season with arguably the most talented secondary in the NFL.

– Vasilis Lericos


Tampa was a highly-rated cornerback that leaves a bit of a mystery why he fell completely off Day 2. After nabbing Wiggins, a press-man corner, they go with Tampa who is experienced in zone work. That said, Tampa has the physical traits to become a press-man cornerback, but that will likely be an unpleasant training experience to learn at the NFL level.

– Kyle Phoenix


T.J. Tampa is a pure best player available pick and was considered by many to be a second-round prospect. Tampa is a good athlete with a strong physical profile. He’ll give the Ravens more added insurance and depth at the cornerback position after they drafted Nate Wiggins in Round 1.

– Frank Platko


To be able to land a prospect of TJ Tampa’s athletic profile and proven ability in the bottom of the fourth round is one of the biggest steals of the entire draft given how some pundits projected him as a potential surprise first-rounder. This was clearly a classic ‘best player available’ pick given that they used their first-round pick to take Clemson’s Nate Wiggins who might not even start right away as a rookie.

One of the biggest strengths of the Ravens 2023 juggernaut was their depth at both wide receiver and cornerback as both position groups were deep enough to withstand the injuries that inevitably occurred. And with these two fourth round picks, they’re determined to continue being well prepared in case of injury, plus 2025 replacements for Brandon Stephens and Nelson Agholor who aren’t under contract beyond 2024.

Joshua Reed


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