OWINGS MILLS, Md. — Declan Doyle looked more like a traffic cop. A play sheet in one hand, Doyle bounced around the field Tuesday, motioning with his arms, calling in the offensive plays and moving from one impromptu conversation with a player or coach to the next.The Baltimore Ravens who have gotten to know their first-year offensive coordinator over the past few months suggested there was nothing different or unique about Doyle’s actions or words during Tuesday’s organized team activity.“He gives you a lot, and he talks fast, too,” Ravens wide receiver Zay Flowers said. “I’m like, ‘Hey, Coach, chill, chill.’ He is a genius, though. I love it. We’ve been loving it so far.“It’s going to be fun. He’s throwing a lot of stuff (at us), but that’s how we’re going to learn it. I feel like that’s the best way for us to learn it, to get out there and do it. Let him just throw it at us, and we go out there and put it on the field.”Doyle, 30, was arguably first-year head coach Jesse Minter’s most important hire this offseason, and it certainly came with some risk. Doyle is only nine months older than Baltimore’s two-time MVP quarterback, Lamar Jackson, and he’s never been a full-time play caller at any level before. Doyle was an offensive coordinator for the Chicago Bears last year, but it was a non-play-calling role under head coach Ben Johnson.The Ravens, though, were blown away in the interview process by his intelligence, poise and ability to communicate a plan for an offense that was extremely productive for two seasons under Todd Monken but underperformed last year.The same qualities that were evident to Minter and the team’s decision-makers have been on full display since, as Doyle has put a new offensive system in place and taught it thoroughly and feverishly and in a manner that has impressed players and coaches on both sides of the ball.“He has the same mentality as us,” Flowers said. “He isn’t playing, but he is a dog. You just get that vibe from him. He’s just ready to go. He is ready to dial it up. He wants the offense to be the best offense in the league, and that’s how he coaches it.”Ravens defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver called Doyle a “human computer.”“When he starts spitting out offensive information and plays from his past, it’s like, he has this Rolodex of plays in his head,” Weaver said. “It’s almost like he has a photographic memory, so I look forward to all the things that he’s going to do with our offense. Even going against them, they do so many things right now from a cadence variation (with) some of their shifts and motions that cause problems and make us have long conversations up there in the defensive staff room.”It will be a few months before anybody outside the Under Armour Performance Center will have a good handle on what the new offense will look like. Studying offenses run by the Bears and Denver Broncos, directed by Johnson and Sean Payton — two of Doyle’s former bosses — is a good place to start.One thing that has already been evident is the importance Doyle places on communication. If he wasn’t speaking with Jackson on Tuesday, he was talking to Flowers, tight end Mark Andrews or one of the younger players.He is also obsessive about the details. That meant spending stretches of practice Tuesday using the quarterback’s cadence to establish an advantage for the offense.“We have to stress our guys,” Doyle said. “We have to work on different cadences. We have to do things in practice. You’re going to toe that line. At times, you’re going to see pre-snap fouls, and really by the time we get to the season, that needs to disappear. That’s unacceptable on any snap. If we have a pre-snap foul, we’re putting ourselves in a (bad) position. That’s a very controllable stat. So, we want to see that improve. We’ve seen that improve as we’ve gone, just the pre-snap operation. I think that’s been a huge emphasis, not only for myself, but as Jesse talks to the team and can talk to the offense, he can piggyback on that.”Ravens excited about BatemanThe subject of trade rumors for much of this offseason following a highly disappointing 2025 campaign, veteran wide receiver Rashod Bateman’s absence from OTAs has been notable. Bateman, though, has been at the Under Armour Performance Center for much of the offseason.Doyle said Tuesday that Bateman has been taking care of “some personal things” that have kept him from OTAs the past couple of weeks, but he and the new coaching staff have had opportunities to work with the 26-year-old wide receiver.“He was here that first week and we were able to work with him quite a bit, and then he was here pretty much the whole offseason, every day,” Doyle said. “He’s an early morning guy, and a lot of times I’d be going to work out and he’s in there doing stuff by himself at times. I’ve been pleased with him. I’m excited for him to get back in here at camp and keep rolling.”Bateman, a 2021 first-round pick, is coming off arguably the most disappointing season of his career. He had just 19 catches for 224 yards and two touchdowns in 13 games. Nagging injuries were a part of that and so was the team’s offensive inconsistency, fueled by Jackson’s injuries.However, there was also a sense that Bateman would benefit from a new coaching staff and a new energy in the building. He had his ups and downs under John Harbaugh and Monken. That the Ravens not only didn’t trade Bateman but also didn’t invest in a veteran pass catcher this offseason suggests they fully expect a strong bounce back from the wide receiver.Rashod Bateman had a career-low 224 receiving yards last season in 13 games. (Tommy Gilligan / Imagn Images)Pavia gets longer lookBackup quarterback Tyler Huntley wasn’t present Tuesday, which led to something that hasn’t happened regularly this offseason: undrafted quarterback Diego Pavia getting repetitions in full-team drills.The Heisman finalist out of Vanderbilt has done most of his work during the practices open to the media in the individual portions. On Tuesday, he and fellow undrafted quarterback Joe Fagnano had opportunities to lead the offense in seven-on-seven and full-team situations.Pavia’s best play was a deep hook-up with wide receiver Cornelius Johnson. He also showed his mobility on one play, darting upfield before he was accidentally knocked to the ground by defensive lineman Dion Wilson Jr.The Ravens have five quarterbacks on their roster with veteran Skylar Thompson joining Jackson, Huntley, Pavia and Fagnano. It’s hardly a lock that they’ll have the roster flexibility to carry five quarterbacks heading into training camp next month. That’s why these repetitions are hugely important this week for Pavia and the other QB3 hopefuls.Quick hittersThe Ravens repeatedly got free runners at the quarterback Tuesday with the pass rush making life difficult for Jackson and the other signal callers. … The defensive play of the day was delivered by second-year safety Keondre Jackson, who intercepted a Thompson pass that was bobbled by rookie tight end Josh Cuevas. Jackson nearly had a second interception a few minutes later, but settled for the pass breakup. … The list of non-participants Tuesday included Huntley, Bateman, offensive linemen Ronnie Stanley and Corey Bullock; defensive linemen Nnamdi Madubuike (neck), Calais Campbell, Travis Jones and John Jenkins; linebackers Teddye Buchanan (knee), Adisa Isaac (elbow) and defensive backs Kyle Hamilton, Chidobe Awuzie and Marlon Humphrey. … Doyle said after practice that he’s still deciding whether he’ll call plays during games from upstairs or the sideline and he’ll do both during the preseason to get a feel for where he’s most comfortable. … Asked after practice whether he’s excited that pass rusher Myles Garrett, who was traded by the Cleveland Browns to the Los Angeles Rams on Monday, is no longer in the AFC North, Flowers said, “Everybody is. Everybody in Baltimore should be excited.” … The Ravens’ final OTA is Thursday and their two-day mandatory minicamp is next week.