Makai Lemon is making USC football look like home again.
The junior wide receiver has exploded in 2025 with 16 receptions, 311 yards and two touchdowns through three games, but his message goes beyond the stat sheet.
Speaking with reporters after practice, Lemon emphasized why staying at USC matters to him, how team-first chemistry fuels the Trojans’ offense, and what it means to build a legacy in the wine and gold.
From the moment he committed as a four-star recruit out of Los Alamitos High School, Lemon saw USC as more than a destination — it was a responsibility.
“This is home. You know, it’s in my backyard. I got my family here. Such a great program,"Lemon said.
"I wouldn’t want to be nowhere else. So, every time I step onto this campus, I just got to do my best and leave such a great legacy behind.”
That statement places him firmly in the lineage of Southern California receivers who stayed home and became Trojan legends.
Former NFL wide receiver Robert Woods (Gardena, CA) set multiple school records before a decade-long NFL career.
Detroit Lions wideout Amon-Ra St. Brown (Anaheim Hills, CA) turned his USC production into All-Pro status, and Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Drake London became a first-round pick after a dominant final season in cardinal and gold.
Lemon has his sights set on that same kind of legacy.
Lemon’s hot start reflects more than just talent — it reflects a group fully committed to playing for one another.
“If you don’t block, you don’t get the ball, man. You got to block before. You got to play for your teammates,” he said, stressing the importance of unselfish play in USC’s receiving corps.
That buy-in goes beyond blocking. On touchdowns, Lemon insists celebrations are about the group: “I celebrate with my team, because I can’t score without them.”
He even praised sophomore tight end Duce Robinson’s downfield hustle: “Everybody flies to the ball, no matter where it’s at. That’s just playing for one another.”
Lemon admits the ride hasn’t been perfect. As a high schooler, he earned a reputation for over-the-top touchdown celebrations, something he has since left behind.
“Definitely learned my lesson. When those things come about, you take it on the chin, learn from it, and don’t do it again,” he said.
That maturity is now paying off as USC leans on him as its most reliable playmaker in a new Big Ten landscape.
Part of Lemon’s evolution is embracing USC’s emphasis on sports science and recovery.
“They definitely preached on sleep being one of the most important recoveries, so we just try to take advantage of that,” Lemon said.
“Any advantage we can do with recovery, we’re doing that. The coaches want the best for us.”
The payoff has been clear — through two weeks, USC’s offense looks sharper, faster, and more explosive than it has in years.
USC faces Michigan State on Saturday, Sept. 20 and Lemon’s ability to stretch the field will be pivotal.
He was the Trojans’ leading receiver last year (52 catches, 764 yards, 3 TDs), and now he enters 2025 as the lone Trojan named to the Big Ten’s preseason Top 25 players list.
For head coach Lincoln Riley’s offense to navigate a gauntlet of defenses, it will start with Lemon’s playmaking and his commitment to the team-first mentality he preaches.
“Just score, man. I’m not going to let anybody get in my way—feeding my family. I just got to do what I got to do.”
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!