Eagles take USC wide receiver Makai Lemon in the first round of NFL Draft: Five thoughts on the pick

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Eagles take USC wide receiver Makai Lemon in the first round of NFL Draft: Five thoughts on the pick

The Eagles moved up three spots in the NFL Draft to select USC wide receiver Makai Lemon with the 20th overall pick in the first round. The trade with the...

Eagles take USC wide receiver Makai Lemon in the first round of NFL Draft: Five thoughts on the pick

The Eagles moved up three spots in the NFL Draft to select USC wide receiver Makai Lemon with the 20th overall pick in the first round. The trade with the...

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The Eagles moved up three spots in the NFL Draft to select USC wide receiver Makai Lemon with the 20th overall pick in the first round.

The trade with the Dallas Cowboys cost the team two fourth-round picks (No. 114 and 137) to go from No. 23 to 20 while also netting them a 2027 seventh-round pick.

1. The Eagles are betting big that Lemon can be the catalyst for a new nucleus of offensive talent.

Going into the first round, I suspected the Eagles’ “Plan A” would be to add a potential blue chip player to the depth chart at offensive tackle. Plan B and C were still quite clear: Add an infusion of youth at other offensive positions in an effort to counterbalance the onslaught of contract extensions coming down the pike for the team’s collection of young defensive drafted in the last few offseasons.

As Kadyn Proctor and Monroe Freeling went off the board at No. 12 and No. 19, respectively, the early run on offensive line left the Eagles without the Lane Johnson successor they’ve sought for the last few seasons. And as the Eagles’ trade-up range arrived, Lemon was the final player on the Eagles’ board remaining from their top 15 prospects they would have beeen willing to trade up for according to general manager Howie Roseman.

“We stacked the board 1 through 23. … We broke that 1 through 23 into tiers of guys that we felt we would trade up for. We kind of had a really good sense of who we thought those first 15 guys would be. One of those guys did not go in the first 15 and he was available to us. When we saw that, it was just trying to figure out where we could move up. There wasn’t as much action in that range that maybe we and some people anticipated. We thought that, starting at 15, maybe there would be more action.”

Roseman sanctioning a trade up the draft board with the Dallas Cowboys for a Biletnikoff Award winner yielded the Eagles DeVonta Smith five years ago. The team doubled down on ushering in a new era of Eagles offense the next day that year with Landon Dickerson in the second round and Kenny Gainwell on Day 3. I’d expect them to operate similarly over the next couple days this year as well with Lemon as the centerpiece.

2. A.J. Brown’s path out of Philadelphia has been fully paved.

Any lingering hope that the door was still open for A.J. Brown to fashion a path back into the Eagles future plans was effectively extinguished by this selection. In truth, it probably should have been extinguished already.

“A.J. Brown replacement” would be an unfair title to give Lemon and the cautionary tale of Treylon Burks as the last receiver to be given it should speak for itself. Still, the Eagles’ receiver room has now become crowded even once Brown’s departure becomes official with Smith as the clear No. 1 set for a significant uptick in usage, Dontayvion Wicks as a complementary piece behind him, and now Lemon likely serving as the No. 2 capable of moving around the formation and operating primarily out of the slot.

For what it’s worth, Roseman pushed back on the notion that the Eagles already have a trade in place with the New England Patriots involving the star wideout that will become official on June 1. Reading between the lines there, even if the two teams did have an agreement, admitting so would likely be viewed as a circumvention of the league’s rules.

Instead, Roseman offered his company line regarding Brown:

“For us, A.J. is a member of the Eagles,” Roseman said. “We don’t have any trades that have been made or that done. And I think for us, you know, we’re taking this one day at a time.”

The number of different scenarios the Eagles front office plays out in the lead-up to the draft paid off in a major way Thursday, with Roseman reading the terrain perfectly with his move up the draft board.

Lemon confirmed that he was actually on the phone with the Pittsburgh Steelers and was expecting to get taken 21st overall while the Eagles were trying to get in touch with him about their decision to move up.

“They really wanted me,” Lemon said. “So I’m all in. They’re going to get everything that I’ve got.”

Roseman acknowledged there were “not many” simulations the team did in the last few weeks that ended with them moving up for Lemon, but they did exist. The Los Angeles Rams taking quarterback Ty Simpson 15th overall and the New York Jets selecting tight end Kenyon Sadiq took Lemon’s two biggest suitors off the board, which left the Eagles with only the Steelers to leapfrog at the expense of some Day 3 draft capital.

4. What type of player are the Eagles getting in Lemon?

There are some similarities between Lemon and Smith as prospects — both were undersized, but highly productive receivers for big college programs — but the most flattering comparisons for Lemon (Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jaxon Smith-Njigba) focus more on his physicality after the catch rather than the route-running polish and body control that made Smith such a highly touted prospect.

That’s the optimistic view for Lemon, who is just 21 years old and finished last season with 79 catches for 1,156 receiving yards and 11 touchdowns. He should be an ideal fit in Mannion’s scheme because of his ability to find space against zone coverage, his reliable hands and his physical run-after-the-catch ability.

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