Archie Miller

Basketball Coach

Archie Miller was born in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania, United States on October 30th, 1978 and is the Basketball Coach. At the age of 46, Archie Miller biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
October 30, 1978
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania, United States
Age
46 years old
Zodiac Sign
Scorpio
Profession
Basketball Coach, Basketball Player
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Archie Miller Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 46 years old, Archie Miller physical status not available right now. We will update Archie Miller's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Archie Miller Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Archie Miller Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Archie Miller Career

Miller was born and raised in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania, just northwest of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His given name is "Ryan" but garnered the nickname "Archie" at an early age due to his personality being similar to that of Archie Bunker, the grouchy TV character from All in the Family.

Miller grew up in a basketball family. Both he and his older brother Sean Miller played for their father, John Miller, a former coach at Blackhawk High School, who went 657–280 in a 35-year coaching career, including 104–29 in the postseason, before retiring in 2005. He won eight Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League championships, the second most in history, and four Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association titles. Miller noted how much he learned from his father, saying, "He's really teaching you how to be a coach, and you don't even realize it. He knew what hard work was. He knew what dedication was. He knew what preparation was. He knew how to communicate. It starts to come naturally to you. It's all you do. It's all you're around, and it's all you talk about.”

In addition to his father's connection to the game, Miller's brother, Sean, was a point guard who went on to play the position at Pitt. Archie views Sean, who is 10 years older, as more of a mentor than a rival. Sean, then an assistant at North Carolina State University, recruited Archie to play as a point guard. Sean later also hired Archie as an assistant at Arizona when he got the job in 2009. “We didn’t grow up in the house together two years apart and the backyard,” Archie said. “... I basically look at him sort of as the role model, the guy whom to be like, the guy who to call when you need something, the one that helped you get to where you wanted to get to." Miller's sister, Lisa, also played Division I basketball at Toledo and Elon.

Following high school, Miller played point guard for North Carolina State from 1998 to 2002. As a senior, he helped lead the Wolfpack to the championship game of the ACC Tournament, and was named to the all-tournament team. He finished his career there with an 84.6% free-throw percentage, a 42.9 three-point field goal percentage, and 218 three-pointers, which were all marks that ranked in the top 10 in school history. He graduated from NC State in 2002 with his bachelor's degree in Parks, Recreation and Tourism.

Coaching career

Miller spent time at several programs as an assistant coach, spending a season at Western Kentucky (2003–04), two at NC State (2004–2006), one at Arizona State (2006–07) under former coach Herb Sendek, two at Ohio State (2007–09) under Thad Matta, and two at Arizona (2009–11) under his brother Sean. While at Arizona, Miller shined as a top recruiter, helping secure Arizona's top 10 recruiting class for 2011 recruits. He also excelled as a game strategist and designed the Wildcats' upset of eighth-ranked Texas to get them to the Sweet 16.

Miller became the head coach of the Dayton Flyers men's basketball team in 2011 and turned around a program that had back-to-back disappointing seasons. His first season with Dayton saw Miller take the school to 20 wins. In his third year, 2014, he had the Flyers in the Elite Eight with 26 wins; to get there, Dayton upset three higher seeded teams. After the Elite Eight run in 2014, Miller faced replacing three starters and four seniors from that team. Despite having a depleted roster featuring just six players who were recruited to Dayton and no active player taller than 6-foot-6, Miller led his Flyers to a 27–9 overall record and to the third round of the 2015 NCAA tournament.

In the following three seasons, Miller averaged over 25 wins and each year coached the team made to the NCAA tournament. The latter two the Flyers also earned regular season Atlantic 10 champion titles. The Flyers' 78 wins in from 2013–16 matched the best three-year period in school history. Due to his coaching abilities, Miller was named a finalist for the 2015 Jim Phelan National Coach of the Year Award. In April, 2015, he joined his father and brother in the Beaver County Sports Hall of Fame.

On March 27, 2017, Miller was named the 29th head coach in the history of the Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team. Miller's first season involved rebuilding the program and laying the foundation of a pack-line defense and valuing possessions. Early in the season, Miller stated practices were 75% defense and 25% offense. With an early second round loss in the 2018 Big Ten tournament and no invitation to either the NCAA tournament or NIT, Indiana's first season under their new coach came to a disappointing close with an overall record of 16–15 and 9–9 in the Big Ten. Nevertheless, Miller got off to an impressive recruiting start, including the commitment of five star recruit Romeo Langford, a McDonald's-All American, 2018 Indiana Mr. Basketball, and (according to ESPN) the six ranked player in the nation.

Despite getting off to a strong start of 12–2, including three conference wins, the 2018–2019 Hoosiers struggled down the backstretch of the season. Riddled with injuries and poor shooting, Indiana lost 12 of 13 games before turning things around and finishing the regular season with a four-game winning streak. Indiana failed to receive a bid to the NCAA tournament but earned a 1-seed in the NIT, where they advanced far before losing in the quarterfinals, ending the season with an overall record of 19–16 and 8–12 in the Big Ten.

For the 2019–2020 season, the Hoosiers started off 11-1 before ending their season with an overall record of 20-12 record including a conference record of 9-11. They won their first game of the Big Ten tournament before it was announced that the rest of the tournament was to be cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The NCAA tournament was later cancelled; the Hoosiers were expected to make the tournament for the first time in Miller's tenure.

The 2020–2021 season proved to be the most disappointing of Miller's tenure with the Hoosiers ending the season on a six game losing streak, including a first round loss in the Big Ten tournament against Rutgers. Indiana finished the season with a 12-15 record and a 7-12 Big Ten record. The Hoosiers lost to Purdue twice during the season, making Miller's record against Purdue 0-7. The Hoosiers failed to receive a bid to the 2021 NCAA Tournament. On March 15, 2021, Miller was fired by Indiana. He finished his four seasons at Indiana with a 67-56 record, a 33-43 Big Ten record, and no NCAA tournament appearances.

On March 18, 2022, Miller reached a deal to be the new head coach at Rhode Island.

Source

In a bizarre blunder for former Flyers coach Archie Miller, Rhode Island head coach Archie Miller takes to the courthouse and nearly gets FLATTED by a Dayton player

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 20, 2024
During his team's game on Saturday, Rhode Island head men's basketball coach Archie Miller meandered onto the court, almost colliding with an opposing player. Brea quickly assembled himself and handed the ball to teammate DaRon Holmes II, who then successfully dunked the ball, but not before affecting the game. Some people argued Miller shouldn't have been banned for being so close to the action as a head coach, whether intentional or not. Miller was only warned of his behavior.
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