Luc Weaver
Bio
Recruiting
Scouting Report
Luc Weaver is a 6-foot-3, ~200-pound boundary wide receiver from Notre Dame (Sherman Oaks, CA) and a four-star prospect (0.9066 composite, top-300 nationally) who committed to USC in Lincoln Riley's top-ranked 2026 class. He pairs a tall, long frame with legitimate track-verified speed (10.68 100m), profiling as a vertical field-stretcher and contested-catch winner on the perimeter.
Physical Profile
At 6-3 with a ~195-205 lb frame, Weaver has prototypical outside-receiver length and a high catch radius that he leverages in 50-50 situations. His speed is not projected — it's documented on the track, where he ran a personal-best 10.68 in the 100m and anchored a school-record 4x100 relay, giving him true take-the-top-off vertical juice that few receivers his size possess. The combination of length plus sub-10.7 closing speed is the trait package that pushed him into four-star territory; the frame still has room to add functional weight without sacrificing that long-strider gear.
Play Style
An outside-the-numbers X/boundary receiver who threatens vertically on every snap and excels on go balls, back-shoulder fades, and jump-ball situations down the sideline. He tracks the deep ball well, high-points over smaller corners, and shows enough long speed to convert a clean release into an explosive play. After the catch he can separate with that track gear rather than juke in a phone booth — a build-speed creator more than a make-you-miss slot.
Strengths
- Track-verified deep speed (10.68 100m) on a 6-3 frame — a rare size/speed blend that makes him a genuine field-stretcher who pulls away from DBs after the catch, not just a tall possession target
- Elite contested-catch and 50-50 ball production: large catch radius, body control, and ball-tracking translated to a junior breakout of 53 catches for 1,024 yards (19.3 ypc) and 10 TDs
- Smoother route-runner than most receivers his height, showing a secondary burst in and out of breaks per Greg Biggins' evaluation — an 'ascending' prospect scouts liked more on each viewing
Areas to Improve
- Production dipped sharply as a senior (22-397-7 vs. 53-1,024-10 as a junior) — needs to show the junior tape was the baseline, not the outlier, against tighter coverage and defensive attention
- Route-tree refinement and play strength: like most tall, speed-first perimeter receivers, he must add lower-body strength to defeat press and sharpen the underneath/intermediate route diversity beyond the vertical and back-shoulder game
College Projection
Likely a redshirt or rotational deep-threat as a true freshman at USC, used in vertical and red-zone packages where his length is a mismatch. With added strength and a refined route tree, he projects as a multi-year starting outside receiver by his second or third season in Riley's spread, which has a track record of developing and feeding boundary X-receivers.
NFL Outlook
Developmental Day 2-3 upside if the traits hit. The size/speed/catch-radius profile (6-3, 10.6 speed, contested-catch production) is exactly what NFL teams gamble on late, but his draft stock will hinge on proving consistent separation and production against Big Ten/Power-conference corners and reversing the senior-year volume dip. Trajectory matters more than current floor here.
Best Fit
An Air Raid/spread offense that isolates an outside receiver and pushes the ball vertically — which is precisely the USC/Lincoln Riley scheme he chose. He maximizes in a system that schemes one-on-one boundary matchups and lets him win with length and speed rather than asking him to grind underneath in a heavy-motion, short-area role.
Player Comparison
Both prospects share the elite Southern California high school pedigree with strong fundamentals and high-level competition exposure. Te'o also had exceptional recruiting ratings and versatility, initially recruited as a safety before moving to linebacker at Notre Dame due to his 6'2" 240lb frame and athleticism. The similar size range (6'2"-6'3") and ability to play multiple positions, combined with the high composite rating from elite prep programs, suggests this prospect could follow a similar developmental path of positional flexibility at the college level.