The Baltimore Ravens continued adding weapons to their evolving offense during the 2026 NFL Draft by selecting former USC standout Ja’Kobi Lane with the No. 80 overall pick in the third round. Lane arrives in Baltimore carrying the type of physical profile NFL teams covet at wide receiver.
At 6-foot-4 and roughly 200 pounds, the former USC Trojans football playmaker brings elite size, catch radius, and vertical ability to a Ravens offense searching for additional explosiveness and consistency alongside Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman.
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Lane made his debut in a Ravens uniform at the NFLPA Rookie Premiere.
At USC, Lane routinely flashed the ability to stretch defenses vertically while also thriving in contested-catch situations within Lincoln Riley’s offense. Much of that production came opposite new Philadelphia Eagles receiver Makai Lemon, forming one of college football’s more intriguing receiving combinations.
Lane’s size and physicality should translate naturally to the AFC North, where wide receivers are often forced to win through contact and difficult coverage matchups. During his three-year USC career, Lane totaled 99 receptions for 1,363 yards and 18 touchdowns. Last season alone, he hauled in 49 catches for 745 yards and four scores across 11 games. For Baltimore, the selection represents another effort to modernize and diversify the passing attack around Lamar Jackson.
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New offensive coordinator Declan Doyle now has another versatile weapon capable of creating mismatches both outside the numbers and inside the red zone. Lane may not immediately enter the NFL as Baltimore’s No. 1 option, but his combination of size, athletic upside, and big-play ability gives the Ravens another developmental piece with significant long-term potential.
If Lane adjusts quickly to the NFL game, Baltimore’s offense could become even more dangerous and unpredictable moving forward.
This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire: Ja’Kobi Lane rocks Ravens gear at NFLPA Rookie Premiere