The acrobatic sophomore receiver turns in a stellar performance during the team's second spring practice.
By MICHAEL LEV
LOS ANGELES ? So how good can Marqise Lee be?
That was the question floating around USC after the sophomore receiver put on a show at practice Thursday.
Matt Barkley, the quarterback on the other end of many of Lee's receptions, didn't hold back.
"The best ever," Barkley said of Lee's potential.
That statement echoed Coach Lane Kiffin's from the end of last season, when he said Lee could become the best receiver in school history.
Lee is off to a flying start ? literally ? in spring camp, hauling in one Barkley pass by soaring into the air in front of defender Jawanza Starling.
"That was a play that you were like, 'Wow,'" first-year receivers coach Tee Martin said. "I told him, 'Man, you just kept climbing the ladder.' At some point you think he's going to stop and the ball's going to go over his head, but he kept elevating."
Martin said the 6-foot, 190-pound Lee has a huge "catch radius," meaning he can grab passes thrown high, low, in front of him or behind him.
"Sometimes that's undervalued in wide receivers until you get one," said Martin, a former quarterback. "He was born that way. And we like it."
Lee shared Pac-12 Freshman Offensive Player of the Year honors last season after catching 73 passes for 1,143 yards and 11 touchdowns. Barkley and Kiffin praised Lee for his approach to the game as much as his physical gifts.
"Even with all he did last year, he's still putting in work like he has to earn something," Barkley said. "I think a lot of guys coming in can learn from his mentality. I think that'll set him apart in the long run."
Kiffin especially liked the fact that Lee kept pushing as the team went through a series of post-practice 100-yard sprints.
"After all the stuff he did today, he could have pulled himself out of that last conditioning (drill)," Kiffin said. "He not only stayed in there (but) won it. That's just who he is."
NOTES
After being the star of the first practice Tuesday, sophomore receiver George Farmer suffered a hamstring injury and missed the latter portion of the workout. ... Receiver Robert Woods (ankle) did very limited work. ... Tight ends Xavier Grimble (toe) and Junior Pomee (undisclosed) did not practice, leaving Randall Telfer as the only healthy tight end available. ... Quarterback Jesse Scroggins (hip) was limited to individual drills.... Defensive lineman Greg Townsend Jr. left practice early because of a back injury. ... Tailback D.J. Morgan had two long touchdown runs, showing off his breakaway speed. ... The Trojans were sloppier on offense, something Kiffin said is typical for a second practice. ... The Trojans practice in pads Saturday.
Contact the writer: mlev@ocregister.com
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