William Ferguson MillerMBE (born 2 May 1955) is a Scottish former professional football player and manager, who made a club record 560 league appearances for Aberdeen. Sir Alex Ferguson described Miller as "the best penalty box defender in the world".[3]
Club career
Born in Glasgow, Miller was raised in the Bridgeton area of Glasgow. He had little interest in football as a young child, and when he did become drawn to the game he played initially as a goalkeeper.[1] He was scouted by several professional clubs while playing as a forward with Glasgow Schools and Eastercraigs Boys Club.[4][2]
Having been on unofficial schoolboy terms in 1969, Miller signed full-time for Aberdeen in 1971 at the age of 16 and spent a season on loan with Peterhead in the Highland League, scoring 24 goals;[5][2] upon his return he was converted to a central defender/sweeper in the reserves on the advice of Teddy Scott,[4][6] winning the SFL Reserve Cup in 1973,[7] established himself in that position in the first team in place of Henning Boel,[1][2] and by 1975 had been made captain by manager Ally MacLeod.
Miller's central defensive partnership with Alex McLeish was integral to Aberdeen's success in the 1980s,[8] as they won all the major domestic honours and the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1983. He made at least 40 appearances for Aberdeen in 14 consecutive seasons,[2] amassing a total of 12 trophies won as well as appearing in several other finals.[6] His total of 797 competitive appearances for the club is comfortably (by more than 100 matches) the all-time record.
In 2003, Willie Miller was voted the greatest Aberdeen player of all time in a poll to mark the club's centenary.[12] In 2015 it was no surprise when he was named in Aberdeen's 'greatest ever team' by supporters of the club.[13]
He was an inaugural inductee to the Scottish Football Hall of Fame in 2004,[18] and is also on the international roll of honour, having won 50 international caps. In 2010, Miller was chosen as one of the eleven members of Scotland's Greatest Team, by viewers of the Scottish Television documentary series, which sought the fans' opinion on the best Scotland players since the 1960s.[19] Viewers also chose Alex McLeish as his partner in central defence.
Managerial career
In February 1992, he was appointed Aberdeen manager, replacing the sacked Alex Smith.[20] Despite two second-place finishes in the league and two losing cup finals in 1992–93, Miller was sacked in February 1995[2][6][21] with the club in danger of being relegated for the first time in its history (survival was eventually achieved via a playoff).
In May 2004, Miller was appointed to the Aberdeen board and given executive responsibility for football.[2] He played a large role in the appointment of Jimmy Calderwood (a friend from their Glasgow Schools days)[1] as manager,[22] as well as progressing the club's youth academy.[6]
In June 2011, he was appointed as Aberdeen's Director of Football Development, with the responsibility of finding new playing talent for the club.[23] He departed again in 2012.[6][21]
Career outside football
Miller has worked for the BBC, particularly for Radio Scotland, as a football commentator and analyst.[2] He has written two autobiographies, The Miller's Tale and The Don, the latter being published in 2007.[24][1] His third book, Willie Miller's Aberdeen Dream Team, was published in 2011.[4]