Here's a look at what other media are saying about the Ravens:
• The Sporting News' Vinnie Iyer looks at five reasons why the Ravens will be a more consistent playoff team this decade.
1. The 3-4 defense. Until Hall of Fame-bound playmakers such as Lewis and safety Ed Reed hang it up, fans always will think defense first. Before it was Sam Adams and Tony Siragusa clogging the gaps, and now it's big athlete Haloti Ngata leading the front three.
• NFL.com's Jim Gigliotti says wide receiver Anquan Boldin should have a big impact on a receiving corps that has been waiting for a true No. 1 guy.
Stop us if you've heard this one before: Now that the Ravens have (fill in the blank), they finally have a big-play wide receiver to complement their strong running game and intimidating defense... But now that the Ravens have Boldin, they finally have a big-play wide receiver ... no really, we mean it.
• The Oklahoman last month checked in with wide receiver Mark Clayton, who earned his communicatons degree from Oklahoma.
[Clayton] was picked by the Baltimore Ravens in the first round of the 2005 NFL Draft, just 12 hours shy of finishing his communications degree. Although he's not done in NFL, Clayton seized the opportunity to finish school through OU's degree completion program.
• ESPN.com's James Walker says outside linebacker Terrell Suggs is a player to watch during training camp.
Terrell Suggs of the Baltimore Ravens openly admits 2009 was a down year. But it also led to a bold proclamation for this upcoming season. "Rest assured, it will never happen again," Suggs recently told reporters.
• Ravens wide receiver Donte' Stallworth appeared on ESPN's "Jim Rome Is Burning" on Tuesday, discussing how he has tried to move forward after his 2009 DUI manslaughter conviction.
Asked if he'll always be judged by the events of March 14, 2009, when he struck and killed a man named Mario Reyes, Stallworth answered, "People who really know me, who have known me for a while and been around me, know what kind of person I am. But for people who don't know me, they may judge me off this one instance. But if someone takes the time to get to know me, they'll know that I'm not the kind of person that has been portrayed in the media."
[Compiled by Colin Stevens]