Good luck to him…he might start getting buyer’s remorse when he shows up in University Park and sees the competition in the WR room. Also, keep in mind that USC does not pay much in NIL to incoming recruits. They save their big bucks for transfers that have already shown ability in the college game or organic recruits that have made their mark, like Zach Branch. All a guy like Myles is really going to get as an incoming freshman is the ability to compete and get exposure at a higher level than in Utah. If he does really well and is able to get into USC’s WR rotation, he’ll get paid as a sophomore. If that doesn’t happen, then you can expect him to enter the portal in December 2025.
Here’s a link to an interesting story on how USC does NIL business:
Is USC prepared for NIL floodgates opening and no NCAA restrictions?
It’s quite possible that Utah offered Myles as much or even more in NIL than what USC did. The difference is that at USC his earning potential ceiling is much higher.