The New York Jets could very well be in the market for a wide receiver in the 2026 NFL Draft, and if they are, USC’s Makai Lemon figures to be high on their radar.
Lemon is widely viewed as one of the top three wide receivers in this class and would make plenty of sense as a target at No. 16 overall if he is still on the board. Under normal circumstances, there is a decent chance he would be drafted well before that point.
However, if the “reports” coming out of the NFL Combine are to be believed, Lemon could slide for reasons that have nothing to do with his performance on the field. And yes, these so-called "reports" seem to suggest we're fully entrenched in draft season now.
There has been some chatter suggesting Lemon struggled badly in his interviews at the Combine, with a few quote-unquote insiders claiming his meetings did not go well at all. According to those "reports," some teams may have even gone as far as removing him from their boards entirely based on those interview impressions.
Jets could luck into Makai Lemon at No. 16 in the draft
Former NFL player turned analyst/social media poster Breiden Fehoko said Sunday that he was told by a scout that Lemon “absolutely bombed” his Combine interviews and that “whoever advised the kid needs to be fired.”
This sentiment was echoed by Jets insider Chris Nimbley (via Play Like A Jet), who insisted that Lemon's in-person interviews with teams in Indianapolis were "a disaster." That chatter has only grown louder over the last 24 or so hours.
Lemon, along with Arizona State's Jordyn Tyson and Ohio State's Carnell Tate, is widely seen as a potential top-15 pick in this year's draft. The 2025 Biletnikoff Award winner is fresh off a 1,156-yard season that saw him earn Unanimous All-American honors.
He may not be the fastest or biggest (5-foot-11, 195 pounds) receiver in this class, but his outstanding separation skills have garnered comparisons to the likes of NFL superstars Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Amon Ra-St. Brown.
However, if Lemon did truly "bomb" his Combine interviews, there's a chance he could experience a draft-day slide, perhaps right into the Jets' laps at No. 16 overall.
Of course, this is the type of chatter that surfaces every year around the Combine, and it is rarely something that should be taken at face value. Reports about prospects “bombing” interviews are nothing new, and they often come from sources far less credible than the league’s most trusted insiders.
This is not Adam Schefter or Ian Rapoport reporting concrete information, but rather the usual mix of hearsay and secondhand buzz that tends to swirl around Indianapolis after a long week of meetings.
History has shown time and again that interview impressions, good or bad, do not always translate to NFL success. Still, it is something worth monitoring, because if other teams truly sour on Lemon for reasons unrelated to his on-field ability and the Jets are not among them, they could find themselves getting extremely lucky.
A slide to No. 16 would give New York the chance to pair Lemon with Garrett Wilson and create a dangerous one-two punch in their passing game. If teams really want to overthink themselves out of a talent like Lemon, the Jets should be more than happy to take advantage.
