Makai Lemon NFL Draft scouting report: Why the USC star might be the most complete WR in the 2026 class
Small hands aside, Lemon has everything NFL teams want in a first-round wideout
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Makai Lemon was born roughly 25 miles southeast of the University of Southern California campus in 2004, and his parents noticed his athleticism early. His father, Mike Lemon, played running back at UNLV, and his uncle, Tim Lemon, was a second-round pick by Major League Baseball’s St. Louis Cardinals, so it was no surprise when the family found Makai doing skateboard tricks at three years old.
Sports soon became part of his routine, and football took center stage around the time he was 11. He routinely played both sides of the ball and won with the Garden Grove Bulldogs in Pop Warner, including a national title.
Not surprisingly, Lemon became a high school sensation, first with La Mirada and then at Los Alamitos, where he played with his Pop Warner quarterback, Malachi Nelson. Lemon earned MaxPreps first-team all-state honors in each of his final three years and MaxPreps first-team All-American honors in each of his final two. He played in the Under Armour All-American Bowl following the 2022 season and was on the same team as fellow 2026 draftees running back Jeremiyah Love and wide receiver Zachariah Branch.
Lemon began drawing attention from college recruiters as early as his freshman year, receiving an offer from Colorado. Arizona State and Oregon State followed, and while Lemon badly wanted to stay close to home and play for Southern Cal — which also offered him — Oklahoma and Lincoln Riley eventually won him over, and he initially committed there in August 2021.
Three months later, however, Riley left the Sooners to become the USC Trojans’ head coach and pushed for Lemon to join him. Lemon admitted it wasn’t a hard decision to flip his commitment to Southern Cal, which he did that December as a four-star prospect, per 247Sports. Lemon then remained committed to the Trojans for his entire collegiate career, refusing to consider transferring.
Note: ⭐️ represents Lemon’s 247Sports star rating as a high school recruit.

Makai Lemon
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Position: No. 4 WR | Overall: No. 18
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Jaxon Smith-Njigba
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Based on his film, Lemon is one of the cleanest, most polished prospects in the 2026 draft class. His greatest strengths are his hands, his change of direction, his toughness and his versatility. His weaknesses? There aren’t many, but he’s one of those guys who you’ll say “fast but not the fastest” or “strong but not the strongest.” All that stated, there were the same kind of mild concerns for Jaxon Smith-Njigba when he came into the league and he easily overcame them once he got a shot to lead Seattle’s receiving group. Lemon is a little bit faster than Smith-Njigba and the same kind of competitor and mature leader otherwise.
Caught 11 of 12 red-zone targets in 2025, scoring on seven of his final 10 red-zone targets; also went untouched on two four-yard hand-offs that went for scores
| Season | School | G | Tar | Rec | Yds | Yds/Rec | Total TD | FL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | USC | 12 | 108 | 79 | 1156 | 14.6 | 13 | 1 |
| 2024 | USC | 12 | 67 | 52 | 764 | 14.7 | 3 | 0 |
| 2023 | USC | 9 | 8 | 6 | 88 | 14.7 | 0 | 0 |
NFL combine 2026: Grades for top WR prospects, plus other standout performers from on-field workouts
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2. Back-to-back routes from Lemon that should’ve been big plays — sudden out of his break and good to find space vs zone on the first play, nice cut out of a double move from the slot on the second play — and the QB missed him both times. pic.twitter.com/J4WD7YK15N
— #AskFFT (@daverichard) February 20, 2026
3. Lemon gets off the line with good burst and good speed in his route before in-breaking on the post and leaping high and adjusting for the ball, then taking a hit on the way down. Dude is fast, athletic and tough! pic.twitter.com/geSbNgnBIF
— #AskFFT (@daverichard) February 20, 2026
4. Lemon’s in the slot to the left & gets vertical quickly but struggles to shed the press … until Lemon peels off at the last second and reaches up for the pass while falling backward with the defender’s arm thrust onto his facemask. Love this nuance and concentration. pic.twitter.com/JoAOO1MfU0
— #AskFFT (@daverichard) February 20, 2026
5. From the slot to the right, Lemon has a good get-off & runs a good post-corner route to trip up the DB, but no target yet. He sees the QB scrambling and tries to make himself available. So he curls back a step toward the QB and earns the target, getting a foot down & falling… pic.twitter.com/azEF71Ieta
— #AskFFT (@daverichard) February 20, 2026
There really isn’t much Lemon can’t do at a high level. An offense that values versatile playmakers who can line up anywhere could prioritize Lemon over any other receiver in the class because he’s polished, quick, tough and sure-handed. He doesn’t carry injury concerns and contributes in nearly every facet of the receiving game.
At minimum, Lemon projects as a reliable slot receiver capable of carving out a long NFL career with steady production. He also has the upside to become the type of receiver who posts around 90 receptions, 1,150 yards and seven-plus touchdowns in a season, even though the historical track record for receivers with small hands suggests otherwise. Lemon projects as a first-round pick, though likely not within the first 10 selections.
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