- Mike Miller (basketball player)
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Mike Miller Miller with the Washington Wizards No. 13 Miami Heat Shooting guard / Small forward Personal information Date of birth February 19, 1980 Place of birth Mitchell, South Dakota Nationality United States Listed height 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) Listed weight 218 lb (99 kg) Career information College Florida NBA Draft 2000 / Round: 1 / Pick: 5th overall Selected by the Orlando Magic Pro career 2000–present League NBA Career history 2000–2003 Orlando Magic 2003–2008 Memphis Grizzlies 2008–2009 Minnesota Timberwolves 2009–2010 Washington Wizards 2010–present Miami Heat Career highlights and awards Stats at NBA.com MedalsMen's basketball Competitor for United States FIBA Americas Championship Gold 2007 Las Vegas National team Goodwill Games Gold 2001 Brisbane National team FIBA Americas U18 Championship Gold 1998 Puerto Plata National team Michael Lloyd "Mike" Miller (born February 19, 1980) is an American professional basketball player who is a shooting guard and small forward for the Miami Heat of the National Basketball Association (NBA).[1] He played college basketball for the University of Florida, and was selected by the Orlando Magic in the first round of the 2000 NBA Draft. He has also played for the Memphis Grizzlies, Minnesota Timberwolves, and Washington Wizards. Miller was awarded NBA Rookie of the Year in 2001.
Contents
Career
Early career
Known for his ability to hit the three-pointer, he attended the University of Florida from 1998 until 2000. As a sophomore, Miller led the Gators to the 2000 NCAA Championship game, losing to Michigan State. He hit perhaps the most dramatic shot of the tournament that year in the opening round against Butler. As the fifth-seeded Gators trailed the underdog Bulldogs by one, Miller drove to the basket and laid it in as time expired. That summer, he was taken with the 5th overall pick in the NBA Draft by the Orlando Magic. Miller won the 2001 NBA Rookie of the Year Award while being the only first-year player to appear in all 82 regular season games.
Memphis Grizzlies
He was traded to Memphis midway through 2002–03 NBA season. He was the recipient of the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award for the 2005–06 season. He averaged 13.7 ppg 5.4 rpg 2.7 apg while shooting 47% from the field and 41% from three-point range, while playing 30.6 minutes per game.
On January 3, 2007 Miller made nine three-pointers in a win over the Golden State Warriors, breaking Sam Mack's Grizzlies franchise record of eight in a game set in February 1999.[2] The two previous games Miller hit seven threes.[3] This made him the first NBA player to hit at least seven three-pointers in three consecutive games[4] since the Dallas Mavericks' George McCloud achieved it in 1996.[5]
He holds the Memphis Grizzlies franchise record for most points scored in a single game, with 45 on February 21, 2007, against the Golden State Warriors.[6]
After the 2006–07 NBA season, Miller was announced as a member of the USA Basketball team.
Minnesota Timberwolves
On June 26, 2008, Miller, Brian Cardinal, Jason Collins, and the 5th pick of the 2008 NBA Draft, Kevin Love, were sent to Minnesota in exchange for Marko Jaric, Antoine Walker, Greg Buckner and the 3rd pick O. J. Mayo.[7]
Washington Wizards
On June 23, 2009, Miller and Randy Foye were sent to the Washington Wizards for Oleksiy Pecherov, Etan Thomas, Darius Songaila and a first round draft pick.[8] Miller suffered a shoulder injury and missed a few games during the early part of the 2009–10 NBA season.
Miami Heat
On July 15, 2010, Miller signed a five year $25 million contract with the Miami Heat. He injured his thumb while trying to guard LeBron James during practice during the pre-season, sidelining him for several weeks.[9][10] Miller officially returned to the Miami Heat lineup on December 20, 2010, in a home game against the Dallas Mavericks. Miller got his first start on January 22, 2011, due to a Dwyane Wade illness, and contributed with a season-high 32 points in a win over the Toronto Raptors.
Personal life
Mike and his wife, Jen, have two sons, Mason and Mavrick, and a daughter Jaelyn.[11] His daughter was born during the Heat's appearance in the 2011 Eastern Conference Finals with a serious health issue stemming from pregnancy complications; he spent the first several days of his daughter's life shuttling between practices, games, and the hospital.[12] Miller is an avid lover of animals. He owns three dogs: a Weimaraner named Zeke and two Great Danes, Domino and Rookie. He also has an aquarium filled with exotic fish, and once owned a Java Macaque named Sonny. He often tells the story in which his monkey escaped from his room: "You would always put him in his room, and then we'd lock the door, and then we'd put the dogs out, and then we'd lock the front door. Well, he found out how to unlock doors, unlocked his door, went downstairs, let the dogs in the house and opened the front door. About an hour later we got a call from our neighbors, saying, 'Your monkey is riding your dogs around the neighborhood.'...I said, 'C'mon y'all, y'all got to get in the house."[13][14]
NBA career statistics
Legend GP Games played GS Games started MPG Minutes per game FG% Field-goal percentage 3P% 3-point field-goal percentage FT% Free-throw percentage RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high Regular season
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG 2000–01 Orlando 82 62 29.1 .436 .407 .711 4.0 1.7 .6 .2 11.9 2001–02 Orlando 63 53 33.7 .438 .383 .762 4.3 3.1 .8 .4 15.2 2002–03 Orlando 49 39 37.3 .418 .340 .847 5.8 2.8 .7 .3 16.4 2002–03 Memphis 16 13 22.5 .510 .500 .806 3.4 1.9 .4 .3 12.8 2003–04 Memphis 65 65 27.2 .438 .372 .723 3.3 3.6 .9 .2 11.1 2004–05 Memphis 76 51 30.0 .505 .433 .720 3.9 2.9 .7 .3 13.4 2005–06 Memphis 74 9 30.6 .466 .407 .800 5.4 2.7 .7 .4 13.7 2006–07 Memphis 70 69 39.1 .460 .406 .793 5.4 4.3 .8 .3 18.5 2007–08 Memphis 70 70 35.3 .502 .432 .774 6.7 3.4 .5 .2 16.4 2008–09 Minnesota 73 47 32.3 .482 .378 .732 6.6 4.5 .4 .4 9.9 2009–10 Washington 54 50 33.4 .501 .480 .824 6.2 3.9 .7 .2 10.9 2010–11 Miami 41 2 20.4 .401 .364 .676 4.5 1.2 .5 .0 5.6 Career 733 530 31.7 .462 .404 .768 5.1 3.1 .7 .3 13.2 Playoffs
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG 2001 Orlando 4 4 28.0 .396 .389 .750 4.5 1.8 .0 .8 12.0 2002 Orlando 4 1 18.0 .333 .125 1.000 1.3 1.3 1.0 .0 4.8 2004 Memphis 4 4 24.5 .353 .385 .333 3.0 .8 1.2 .0 7.5 2005 Memphis 4 4 27.5 .486 .471 1.000 2.5 2.8 .0 .8 12.0 2006 Memphis 4 1 26.8 .400 .125 1.000 3.8 1.8 .5 .5 8.5 2011 Miami 18 0 11.9 .340 .297 .000 2.7 .7 .4 .1 2.6 Career 38 14 18.7 .386 .327 .875 2.9 1.2 .5 .2 5.9 See also
- Florida Gators men's basketball
- List of Florida Gators basketball players
References
- ^ Miller signs five-year deal with Heat
- ^ Grizzlies reach 144 in the 'old ball' game : Grizzlies : Commercial Appeal
- ^ ESPN – Golden State vs. Memphis Recap, January 03, 2007
- ^ ESPN – Elias Says ... Arenas gone wild – ESPN
- ^ databaseBasketball.com – NBA Basketball Statistics, Draft, Awards, and History
- ^ Miller scores franchise-record 45 pts. in Grizzlies loss
- ^ Mayo heads to Memphis, Love to Minnesota in blockbuster trade
- ^ "Source: Deal sends Minnesota Timberwolves' Randy Foye, Mike Miller to Washington Wizards". ESPN. 2009-06-24. http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=4282279. Retrieved 2010-12-18.
- ^ "Miller injured thumb trying to guard James". Associated Press. Yahoo Sports. October 24, 2010. http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=Al2iFwDBo_9fCHNBAccT6VW8vLYF?slug=ap-heat-miller. Retrieved 24 October 2010.
- ^ Joseph Goodman (October 24, 2010). "Miller close to returning". Miami Herald. http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/12/18/1979221/miller-close-to-returning.html. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
- ^ NBA.com : Mike Miller Bio Page
- ^ Wallace, Michael (May 25, 2011). "Heat's Mike Miller thinking of daughter". Miami Heat Index. ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/truehoop/miamiheat/news/story?id=6588917. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
- ^ Steinberg, Dan (July 16, 2009). "On Mike Miller's Pet Monkey, and His Jump Shot". Washington Post. http://voices.washingtonpost.com/dcsportsbog/2009/07/on_mike_millers_pet_monkey_and.html. Retrieved 2010-12-18.
- ^ Christie Huckeba (2010-01-26). "Mike Miller Monkeys Around". NBA.com. http://www.nba.com/magic/news/miller_monkey_010910.html. Retrieved 2010-12-18.
External links
- NBA player profile @ NBA.com
2000 NBA Draft First round Kenyon Martin · Stromile Swift · Darius Miles · Marcus Fizer · Mike Miller · DerMarr Johnson · Chris Mihm · Jamal Crawford · Joel Przybilla · Keyon Dooling · Jérôme Moïso · Etan Thomas · Courtney Alexander · Mateen Cleaves · Jason Collier · Hedo Türkoğlu · Desmond Mason · Quentin Richardson · Jamaal Magloire · Speedy Claxton · Morris Peterson · Donnell Harvey · DeShawn Stevenson · Dalibor Bagarić · Jake Tsakalidis · Mamadou N'Diaye · Primož Brezec · Erick Barkley · Mark MadsenSecond round Marko Jarić · Dan Langhi · A. J. Guyton · Jake Voskuhl · Khalid El-Amin · Mike Smith · Soumaila Samake · Eddie House · Eduardo Nájera · Lavor Postell · Hanno Möttölä · Chris Carrawell · Olumide Oyedeji · Michael Redd · Brian Cardinal · Jabari Smith · DeeAndre Hulett · Josip Sesar · Mark Karcher · Jason Hart · Kaniel Dickens · Igor Rakočević · Ernest Brown · Dan McClintock · Cory Hightower · Chris Porter · Jaquay Walls · Scoonie Penn · Pete MickealNBA Rookie of the Year Award 1953: Meineke | 1954: Felix | 1955: Pettit | 1956: Stokes | 1957: Heinsohn | 1958: Sauldsberry | 1959: Baylor | 1960: Chamberlain | 1961: Robertson | 1962: Bellamy | 1963: Dischinger | 1964: Lucas | 1965: Reed | 1966: Barry | 1967: Bing | 1968: Monroe | 1969: Unseld | 1970: Alcindor | 1971: Cowens & Petrie | 1972: Wicks | 1973: McAdoo | 1974: DiGregorio | 1975: Wilkes | 1976: Adams | 1977: Dantley | 1978: Davis | 1979: Ford | 1980: Bird | 1981: Griffith | 1982: Williams | 1983: Cummings | 1984: Sampson | 1985: Jordan | 1986: Ewing | 1987: Person | 1988: Jackson | 1989: Richmond | 1990: Robinson | 1991: Coleman | 1992: Johnson | 1993: O'Neal | 1994: Webber | 1995: Hill & Kidd | 1996: Stoudamire | 1997: Iverson | 1998: Duncan | 1999: Carter | 2000: Brand & Francis | 2001: Miller | 2002: Gasol | 2003: Stoudemire | 2004: James | 2005: Okafor | 2006: Paul | 2007: Roy | 2008: Durant | 2009: Rose | 2010: Evans | 2011: GriffinNBA Sixth Man of the Year Award 1983: Jones | 1984: McHale | 1985: McHale | 1986: Walton | 1987: Pierce | 1988: Tarpley | 1989: Johnson | 1990: Pierce | 1991: Schrempf | 1992: Schrempf | 1993: Robinson | 1994: Curry | 1995: Mason | 1996: Kukoč | 1997: Starks | 1998: Manning | 1999: Armstrong | 2000: Rogers | 2001: McKie | 2002: Williamson | 2003: Jackson | 2004: Jamison | 2005: Gordon | 2006: Miller | 2007: Barbosa | 2008: Ginóbili | 2009: Terry | 2010: Crawford | 2011: OdomMiami Heat current roster Categories:- 1980 births
- Living people
- American basketball players
- Basketball players from South Dakota
- Florida Gators men's basketball players
- Orlando Magic draft picks
- Orlando Magic players
- McDonald's High School All-Americans
- Memphis Grizzlies players
- Miami Heat players
- Minnesota Timberwolves players
- Parade High School All-Americans (boys' basketball)
- People from Mitchell, South Dakota
- Shooting guards
- Small forwards
- Washington Wizards players
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