Makai Lemon “Oozes Toughness”

Makai Lemon’s combine podium performance didn’t bother NFL team executives

Receiver Makai Lemon runs during a drill at USC's Pro Day on Thursday.

Biletnikoff winner Makai Lemon, drilling at USC’s Pro Day, is a likely first round WR NFL Draft pick  —  April 23-25 in Pittsburgh. (Kyusung Gong / AP)
  • Biletnikoff Award winner Makai Lemon showcased his elite receiver skills at USC’s pro day before 50 NFL scouts, following scrutiny about his demeanor at the combine.

  • One NFL executive says teams want players to show the true version of themselves when talking to the media at the NFL scouting combine. “We love it.”

  • Rams general manager Les Snead, who attended USC’s pro day, says how players act in front of the media at the combine isn’t always a true reflection of who they are the rest of the time.

Sam Farmer (LA Times)  —  Makai Lemon got another chance Thursday to demonstrate his skills for NFL scouts.

About 50 of them — representatives from each of the 32 teams — gathered at USC to spend a few hours evaluating the school’s latest class of draft prospects. Lemon, who won the Biletnikoff Award last fall as college football’s top receiver, had everyone’s attention.

“Running good routes, catching the ball, running fast,” he said of his objectives for the day. “Whatever I showcase, let them know I can do it at a high level.”

It was a more comfortable setting than Indianapolis. At the scouting combine, Lemon’s performance at the podium drew scrutiny — not for anything he said, but for how he said it. He swayed. He was measured, unhurried, visibly unbothered. Some read it as detached. Others saw something else entirely.

“We don’t want a guy who’s phony and coached up,” said one team executive, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We want a guy to be his authentic self. As long as he’s not a jerk, we love it.”

Rams general manager Les Snead, who attended Thursday’s workout of 17 USC players, put it another way. “At the combine you’re usually getting some version of a personality,” he said. “A lot of times it’s, ‘This is my interview personality,’ and that’s not necessarily who they are 365 days a year.”

USC receiver Makai Lemon catches pass during a drill at the NFL combine in Indianapolis last month.

The other USC prospects who participated in Thursday’s workouts were receivers Ja’Kobi Lane, Jaden Richardson and Jay Fair; running back Eli Sanders; tight end Lake McRee; offensive linemen J’Onre Reed and DJ Wingfield; defensive linemen Anthony Lucas and Keeshawn Silver; linebacker Eric Gentry; cornerbacks DJ Harvey and DeCarlos Nicholson; safeties Bishop Fitzgerald and Kamari Ramsey; punter Sam Johnson; and long snapper Hank Pepper.

Former Trojan linebacker Mason Cobb, who was on the team in 2024, also participated.

Lemon’s credentials are not in dispute. He finished last season with 79 catches for 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns. At 5-foot-11 and 192 pounds he’s not big for the position, and according to a school release ran the 40 in 4.46 seconds, which is fast but not blistering. But those aren’t his main strengths.

“One of the underrated aspects when you’re watching wide receivers is toughness, and he kind of oozes toughness,” said Daniel Jeremiah, lead draft analyst for NFL Network. “He catches everything. He’s super strong physically and super strong to the ball.”

The technical detail that stands out for Jeremiah: Lemon doesn’t leave his feet to catch unless he has to. He stays grounded, keeps himself in position to do something after the ball arrives. Receivers who lunge and cradle in the air have nowhere to go. Receivers who catch with their feet under them turn completions into more yards.

“He’s got a really good feel for the game,” Jeremiah said. “I think he’s going to be a high-volume guy. I think he’ll catch 90-plus balls every year and be the quarterback’s best friend.”

Snead, who has a history of finding productive receivers that others miss — among them Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua — is skeptical of the 40 as a measuring stick.

“You rarely see a route in football where the receiver runs straight for 40 yards and then makes his break,” he said. “Even on a go route you’re usually trying to get an edge on the defender, so you’re not running straight. The 40 might tell you how many gears you have in your body. But sometimes you need to run a route in third gear and then shift into fourth or fifth, or decelerate.”

Jeremiah ranks Lemon among the two best receivers in this draft, giving a slight edge to Ohio State’s Carnell Tate, who projects as more of a down-the-field, big-play threat. Comparisons to Detroit’s Amon-Ra St. Brown (also a former USC player) and Tampa Bay’s Emeka Egbuka have circulated. Jeremiah sees those, but also reaches back to Jarvis Landry, the former Louisiana State standout who made five Pro Bowl appearances.

“I actually think Lemon is a better player than Jarvis Landry coming out,” Jeremiah said. “When you’re instinctive, you’re tough and you catch everything, that’s a pretty high floor. Absolute worst case, you’re going to have a steady, dependable, reliable player.”

Watching from the sideline Thursday was Marqise Lee, who won the Biletnikoff in 2012 — the only other USC player to do so — and was a second-round pick of the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2014. He has spent much of the past several months as a mentor to Lemon, and when the combine criticism arrived Lee wasn’t surprised by any of it.

“My biggest thing to him was just enjoy it,” Lee said. “I know he got a lot of backlash about the media stuff and things like that, but when you know the guy, he’s not a big talker. He’s calm, he’s all about business.”

Lee believes Lemon has the skills to thrive at the next level, but knows how much context matters once a player gets there.

“The league is different until you actually get there and get the opportunity to practice and go through it,” Lee said. “Some people have a hard time adapting. Once he gets on a team I’ll be texting him: ‘How’s the comfort level? How’s the offense?’ Because that stuff matters. Offensive coordinator, people loving you — all that matters.”

Lemon, for his part, already sounds like someone who has thought about this.

“I want to go in there and be myself,” he said. “Don’t want to try to be anybody else.”

latimes.com

___________

TrojanDailyBlog members —  We always encourage you to add factual information, insight, divergent opinions, or new topics to the TDB that don’t necessarily pertain to any particular moderator post or member comment.

 

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SoCal72
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March 20, 2026 10:30 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

No, Ryan Kartje, swing and a miss! None of those “six sources” would have taken the stand. NOT A ONE! This was simply a “F U chump change go away” DEI settlement. Robert Michael Bohn’s depo would have confirmed his boorish behavior, great only for giggles, optically bad for USC, but it would NOT have proved the allegations in her case. At its core, this was a MERITLESS, extortionate lawsuit.

Golden Trojan
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March 20, 2026 11:22 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Curious she was still employed by USC for 4 months after Bohn was fired and 1 month after Jen Cohen was hired. Bohn likely was harassing her but it could also be she wasn’t very good at her job. Easier/cheaper for USC to settle out of court and move on.

SoCal72
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March 20, 2026 4:35 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Chump change…. cost to defend exceeded merit of claim value.

SoCal72
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March 19, 2026 4:20 pm

URBAN MEYER WAS CORRECT

Traditions require believers.
There are fewer now.
The Notre Dame rivalry did not end when it was canceled. It ended when it stopped mattering, with a shrug.
Now it is just another middling game,
Against San José State Spartans football.

parcelman007
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March 19, 2026 9:07 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

They have great pitching. In 22 games they have only given up 44 runs and they have had 7 shut-outs

Golden Trojan
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March 19, 2026 10:11 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Random but interesting, Trojans have won 6 and lost 1 on the last at bat, 3 of them in extra innings. That may bite them when the schedule gets tougher.

SoCal72
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March 19, 2026 1:34 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Gotta love Leinart’s refusal!

Golden Trojan
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March 18, 2026 3:46 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

USC now ranks 6th for ’26 BB recruits with 3 5* players, equaling Duke by the way for number of 5* players. Finally Musselman is getting recruits instead of all transfers. Keep it up Eric!

PN4SC
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March 18, 2026 12:33 pm

5 Star Small Forward Christian Collins just committed to SC. The Trojans beat out Kentucky and Louisville for his services. All of the top recruiting services rank him as one of the 10 best players in the country. I have to believe this will work out better than the last 5 star player we signed( he shall remain unnamed.)

Golden Trojan
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March 18, 2026 8:41 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Oregon moved into the top 25, at #25 or #21 depending on the poll. #15/17 Oregon St Mar. 24th, #1 UCLA Apr. 3-5, #21/25 Oregon May 14-16, at Oregon. Other road trips to Maryland next weekend and Nebraska next month.

Golden Trojan
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March 17, 2026 8:57 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

She will fill a huge void Gottlieb’s team was lacking this season. Hope USC can keep everybody from transfer. They may be a force next season, with Davidson and Watkins in the back court and Smith and Okeke in the paint.

ATL D.D.S.
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ATL D.D.S.
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March 17, 2026 5:35 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

I kept reading the list, thinking where’s Linkin’? Laughed when I had to read almost to the end of the list.

Everybody knows now that this guy can’t build a program.

parcelman007
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March 17, 2026 9:09 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

I would have rated Lane Kiffin higher than 15.

SoCal72
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March 18, 2026 2:19 pm
Reply to  parcelman007

Anybody click on this link except the poster?

parcelman007
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parcelman007
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March 19, 2026 9:41 am
Reply to  SoCal72

Yeah, Casper the friendly ghost clicked on it but since he’s invisible, so are his clicks.

parcelman007
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March 14, 2026 5:55 pm

I would at least try that Honor kid at running back. He looks like the next USC Heisman winner at RB if you just look at his film.

volunteerTrojan
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March 15, 2026 6:14 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

“…always great to beat schools like ORE and ND on a kid they really wanted…”

100%!!!!!

parcelman007
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March 15, 2026 8:15 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

The reason he can play so many positions is because he is so quick. He’s fast. They say he runs a 10.5 in the hundred meters and if he runs track this spring he will probably improve on that. But his quickness is off the charts. I’m surprised that he only had 3 interceptions last year. With that kind of quickness he should have unbelievable closing speed. But when he runs the ball, he looks for light and when he see it he explodes through that hole and past the D-Linemen and LB’s before they know what happened. I would… Read more »

Jamaica
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March 16, 2026 2:48 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

It’s getting to where teams have at least 1or2 WRs over 6’1 and can leap into the sky. Maybe Honor would be the defender on the speedster-flanker of the opponent. But having an athlete like Reggie that can run & fly out of the backfield for a pass? That guy is invaluable on any team and scare the sh&t out of a DC. That is a Taylor-made weapon on a offense like Riley’s.

parcelman007
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March 14, 2026 5:53 pm

What blows my mind is that UCLA is rated #1 in the country with a record of about 15-2 and SC is rated 25th with a record of 19-1. Who is deciding these rankins?

PN4SC
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March 14, 2026 6:00 pm
Reply to  parcelman007

ucla has played a more difficult schedule, and is deserving of a #1 ranking. I hate having to admit that. That being said, SC has been undervalued all season, due to voters rankings teams based off of preseason projections, and not what they have done on the field.

parcelman007
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March 14, 2026 6:46 pm
Reply to  PN4SC

That’s a big gap going from 1st(with a record of 15-2) to 25th (with a record of 19-1).

Golden Trojan
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March 15, 2026 8:27 am
Reply to  parcelman007

UCLA has played and won 6 games against 4 teams in the top 25. USC hasn’t played any ranked teams but should move up this week if the loss yesterday doesn’t hurt too much.

Golden Trojan
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March 14, 2026 3:42 pm
Reply to  Allen Wallace

What a suck day for baseball, 30s and snow flurries, and then lose their first to a suck team. Come back for a couple weeks of warm weather and home cooking. Start a new streak.

PN4SC
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March 14, 2026 1:21 pm

Honor Favalea, # 1 recruit in California, just committed to USC

Golden Trojan
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March 14, 2026 6:42 am
Reply to  Allen Wallace

Nasty cold day in Chi-town but the hot bats and all that base running should keep them warm. Couple more mercy rule games and come back to warm SoCal 20-0.