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Former NBA Player Advances Career Through Online MBA Program

Former NBA Player Advances Career Through Online MBA Program

Olympian and 2019 Ivy League Player of the Year Miye Oni builds on his athletic achievements with an MBA from USC Marshall.

02.02.26
Omiye Oni

Miye Oni, OMBA student and entrepreneur.

[Photo courtesy of Oni]

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When Miye Oni was traded by the Utah Jazz in 2022, he knew it was time to take control of his own career. Recognizing the year-to-year volatility of professional sports, the small forward decided to reframe his long-term goals and explore new opportunities.

“I felt like I needed to take more control over my own career and not be at the whim of personnel or executive changes,” Oni recalled. “That’s what pushed me to start my own real estate company and start investing and just doing different things outside of basketball.”

Four years after his epiphany, Oni has combined his wide-ranging interests, founding a real estate company, Point of View Holdings and running the cybersecurity firm DotWave Solutions, all while playing professional basketball in Puerto Rico. Never satisfied, however, Oni is looking to deepen his business acumen and expand his professional network in USC Marshall’s Online MBA (OMBA) program.

“It’s perfect for me because I wanted to take advantage of my free time and I can be flexible with my schedule,” Oni said. “I can’t control a lot of things that happen with basketball [or] with the businesses. So I wanted to structure my life where I can remain flexible long-term.”

Oni grew up in a household that valued passion, hard work, and drive. His mother works as a clinical nutritionist and has owned a fashion boutique, a nanny business, and a cleaning business. His father works as an engineer and professor, often working long hours and not returning until late at night. A young Oni marveled at the example his parents set.

“I would see him wake up at 7:00 a.m., go to his office, work from 8 to 5, get changed, drive an hour away to teach a class that goes from 6 to 10,” Oni recalled. “He would come back at 11 … I liked to stay up to wait for him, and then we’d watch soccer highlights together. I’d go to sleep and he’d go back to work till 1 or 2 a.m. and do it all again.”

Oni has followed in his family’s footsteps, striving for excellence on and off the court. At Yale, he was a three-time All-Ivy League selection and in 2019, won Ivy League Player of the Year. That same year, the Utah Jazz drafted him in the second round of the NBA Draft. He finished his undergraduate degree requirements while playing in the Olympics for the Nigerian national team.

I always saw the Trojan family from afar, and I thought that it would be the perfect place to continue my education, just to have a local network and really be a part of the Trojan family.

— Miye Oni

OMBA Student

After being traded by the Jazz and later released by the Oklahoma City Thunder, Oni co-founded Point of View Holdings with his sister, investing in multifamily properties and commercial real estate in the Sun Belt and Southeast regions of the United States.

Despite his myriad of accomplishments, Oni still felt he lagged behind his parents and sister, who has an advanced degree and multiple jobs.

“My whole family, they all have extra degrees … My dad has four, my mom has three, my sister has three. I barely have one,” Oni joked. “I was like, ‘I got to catch up.’”

OMBA, Oni says, is a continuation of that determination and pursuit of excellence.

“[OMBA] does take a high level of effort and extra work that not everyone may be willing to do in my position,” Oni said. “For me, it was something that was very important, and I saw the opportunity to get a headstart knowing that I wanted to get my MBA, knowing that USC was a school that I would love to be a part of and a school I would be proud to be an alumnus from.”

As Oni considered his degree options, he kept returning to one place: USC.

Oni’s love for USC traces back to his childhood when he watched Trojan legends like Reggie Bush and Matt Barkley dominate the gridiron. Throughout his amateur and professional career, he played basketball with multiple USC graduates, including Nick Young, De’Anthony Melton, and Chimezie Metu. Even from a distance, Oni could see the value of USC’s vast alumni network.

“I always saw the Trojan family from afar, and I thought that it would be the perfect place to continue my education, just to have a local network and really be a part of the Trojan family,” Oni said. “I thought it would be a benefit to my life and career, and I thought I could add things to that family as well.”

Just a month into the program, Oni is already seeing the positive effects of the Trojan Network. The OMBA program invites new cohorts to campus for an annual residential week, allowing students to get to know each other in person. Oni felt the Trojan bonds immediately. He connected with new students and even reconnected with old friends he hadn’t seen in years.

Of course, Oni notes, Trojan camaraderie extends well beyond the confines of campus.

“I have my USC crew neck and I wear it and people stop you,” Oni said. “Everyone is just so proud to be a Trojan.”

In addition to developing business expertise, Oni plans to use his education to give back to young people like him. Through his foundation, he runs basketball camps and helps high school students pay for college visits to Ivy League schools and other high-achieving academic institutions. At USC, he hopes to become a leader in the community, guiding student-athletes to success and instilling in them the drive his family instilled in him.

“I feel like I can provide value as a resource and give advice to different members of the athletic program and the basketball team,” Oni said. “[I plan to] delve into that USC community and Trojan family, try to be a steward in that community, and try to drive value and help other people.”