LOS ANGELES — The debate is effectively over. After a Biletnikoff-winning junior campaign that saw him torch defenses for 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns, USC wide receiver Makai Lemon isn’t just knocking on the door of the first round—he’s kicking it down. With the NFL Scouting Combine looming, the latest rankings confirm what Trojan fans have known all season: Lemon is the real deal.
Brugler’s Board: Lemon Cracks the Top 15
The draft industrial complex respects the tape. The Athletic’s Dane Brugler, widely considered the gold standard for draft evaluation, dropped his highly anticipated “Top 100” list this week. While other analysts chase 40-times and height-weight outliers, Brugler planted his flag on production.
Lemon landed at No. 14 overall, the only Trojan to breach the top 100. Brugler’s analysis cuts through the noise:
“Given the USC connection, the Amon-Ra St. Brown comparisons feel too on the nose — but they also fit like a glove. Lemon lacks top-tier physical traits, but there are multiple throws on each USC tape when the quarterback makes a ‘my guy is better than your guy’ decision and puts the ball in a spot for Lemon to go get it. More times than not, he proves the QB right.”
— Dane Brugler, The Athletic
The “Sun God” Blueprint
The comparisons to Detroit Lions All-Pro Amon-Ra St. Brown go beyond the helmet sticker. Like St. Brown, Lemon (5’11”, 195 lbs) wins with elite leverage and violent hands rather than pure track speed. NFL executives are desperate to replicate the “St. Brown Effect”—finding a receiver who moves the chains on 3rd-and-6 with a linebacker draped over him.
Scouts note that Lemon’s 2025 season mirrored St. Brown’s ability to dominate from the slot. He posted a ridiculous 3.13 yards per route run, a metric that screams “NFL ready.” He doesn’t just catch the ball; he erases angles.
The Maiava Connection
Lemon’s breakout wasn’t a solo act. His mind-meld connection with quarterback Jayden Maiava was the engine of the USC offense in 2025. Maiava, who threw for over 3,700 yards, trusted Lemon implicitly. When plays broke down, Lemon was the safety valve. When the Trojans needed a chunk play, Lemon was the primary read.
This chemistry is exactly what teams with young quarterbacks—like the New England Patriots or New York Giants—are hunting. Alternatively, a veteran like Matthew Stafford could slot Lemon instantly into a “Puka Nacua” role, exploiting soft zones while the defense panics about the deep ball.
Draft War Room: Who Pulls the Trigger?
While the top 10 is often reserved for quarterbacks and edge rushers, Lemon sits in the “sweet spot” for playoff contenders looking for an immediate impact player.
- Pittsburgh Steelers (Pick ~21): Reports link Pittsburgh heavily to Lemon. They need a reliable separator to pair with George Pickens.
- Cincinnati Bengals: Imagine Lemon working the middle while Ja’Marr Chase wrecks havoc on the outside. It’s a nightmare fuel scenario for AFC North coordinators.
- Los Angeles Rams: Staying local? It makes too much sense given the McVay offense’s reliance on intelligent route runners.
Makai Lemon isn’t a projection; he’s a professional. Come April, don’t be shocked when he’s the first receiver holding up a jersey on stage.

