FantasyPros will be taking a look at early NFL Draft scouting reports before the Combine in February. Here’s a look at USC wide receiver Ja’Kobi Lane.
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2026 NFL Draft Scouting Report: Ja’Kobi Lane
Ja’Kobi Lane (WR – Ja’Kobi Lane)
6-foot-4 | 200 Pounds
Background
Ja’Kobi Lane was a four-star recruit who played sparingly as a freshman (seven catches, two touchdowns) before stepping into the starting lineup the following year and posting a 43-525-12 (12.2) line. Concluded his collegiate career with a 49-745-4 (15.2) line in 2025.
Positives
Tall two-year starter for a major program, playing the split end position, with the occasional snap as an inside receiver. Shows some suddenness with his feet when releasing against press coverage, and will also mix up his tempo a bit from time to time. Long-strider who can eat up cushions pretty well when working against off-coverage, and runs a decent amount of routes to the intermediate level, often deep in-breaking routes.
Lane uses his hands well to slip by jams. Overall flexibility is above-average for his size, and he is a relatively smooth mover overall. Shows some ability to improvise when the play breaks down. Able to create some downfield opportunities on double moves, and to track the ball over his shoulder downfield relatively well. Presents a big target who works hard to adjust to off-target throws and can pluck the ball away from his frame.
The USC product functioned as an effective red-zone target in his sophomore year and is capable of outjumping opponents on fade routes. Shows good competitiveness and elusiveness after the catch and can run through the occasional arm tackle. Gives good effort as a blocker. Lane’s size/length gives him a high ceiling there.
Negatives
Hasn’t been the highest-volume receiver, and could fade into the background of the offense a bit at times. Comes from an offense that didn’t always ask him to run the most pro-style route tree, with a lot of simple hitches, clearing routes, etc. Route-running polish needs work; sort of glides through the route stem and isn’t the most consistent about attacking an opponent’s leverage.
Dropped four passes in each of the past two seasons against 92 catches, indicating hands that are closer to adequate. Lack of ideal bulk/strength allows defenders to get in-phase and break up some contested catch opportunities. Lane isn’t the most aggressive at the catch point. Hand placement and functional strength in the blocking game aren’t the best, limiting his overall effectiveness there; more potential than effectiveness at this point.
Summary
A big, flexible receiver with good athleticism and competitiveness in the blocking game, but who doesn’t look like the most finished product at this point, running a relatively simple route tree without a bunch of nuance and lacking ideal functional strength.
Those should be areas of his game that could improve with time, but currently make him a bit of a boom-or-bust type. Currently getting Day 2 hype. That might be a bit rich for my blood, but it wouldn’t come as a huge surprise given his tools.
Projection: Round 3/Round 4
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