About: Bill Miller   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/HbMrghg53zjtbZZQx0h8tA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

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  • Bill Miller
  • Bill Miller
rdfs:comment
  • Write the first section of your page here.
  • William "Bill" M. Miller (June 5, 1927 – March 24, 1997), better known by the ring name Dr. Bill Miller, was a professional wrestler. He is a one time American Wrestling Association World champion and also wrestled in the National Wrestling Alliance, the World Wrestling Association in Indianapolis and the World Wide Wrestling Federation. He was a Nine-letterman at Ohio State University, in Football, Wrestling, and Track. He was an All-American Heavyweight wrestler, a two-time Big Ten heavyweight champion, and Conference MVP his Sr. year. He was an All-American shot-put and discus track star, also. He was voted into the Ohio State University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1997 for both Wrestling and Track.
  • He played senior hockey with the Campbellton Tigers and Mount Allison University from 1924 to 1932. In 1932-33 he signed with the senior Moncton Hawks and won the Allan Cup in 1933 and 1934. After the Hawks folded in the middle of the 1934-35 season Miller signed with the Montreal Maroons and helped them win the Stanley Cup. In the middle of the 1935-36 season Miller was traded to the Montreal Canadiens with Toe Blake for Lorne Chabot. He retired at the end of 1936-37.
  • Bill Miller was a professional athlete.
  • Bill Miller played a pathologist in season two of Private Practice. He also played Dr. Mason in season three, a paramedic in season five and an officiant in season six. He was also a member of the production staff for Private Practice.
  • Bill Miller ( - December 31, 1952) was a NASCAR driver from Evansville, IN. He competed in ten Sprint Cup Series events in his career, earning two top-tens. Miller's debut came in 1951, when he competed at Weaverville. Miller left a quick impression, driving through the field of thirty to record a 7th place finish. Although that would ultimately prove to be his career best, Miller ran well the rest of the year. He finished no worse than a 19th place run at Langhorne, recording top-fifteens at tough bullrings such as Mobile and Columbia and tacking on a ninth place showing at Macon.
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  • 6(xsd:integer)
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  • #FFFFFF
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BorderColor
  • silver
Birth Date
  • 1927-06-05(xsd:date)
Name
  • Bill Miller
  • Dr. Bill Miller
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Weight
  • 290.0
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  • #FFE93E
Height
  • 2(xsd:double)
Names
  • Mr. M
  • Big Bill Miller
  • Doctor "X"
  • Dr. Bill Miller
  • The Crimson Knight
death date
  • 1997-03-24(xsd:date)
maxwidth
  • 20(xsd:integer)
TAB
  • General
  • Magazine covers
  • Image gallery
  • Event history
Character
  • *Pathologist *Dr. Mason *Paramedic *Officiant
Debut
  • 1952(xsd:integer)
Seasons
  • PP: 2, 3, 5 and 6
Retired
  • 1976(xsd:integer)
abstract
  • Write the first section of your page here.
  • William "Bill" M. Miller (June 5, 1927 – March 24, 1997), better known by the ring name Dr. Bill Miller, was a professional wrestler. He is a one time American Wrestling Association World champion and also wrestled in the National Wrestling Alliance, the World Wrestling Association in Indianapolis and the World Wide Wrestling Federation. He was a Nine-letterman at Ohio State University, in Football, Wrestling, and Track. He was an All-American Heavyweight wrestler, a two-time Big Ten heavyweight champion, and Conference MVP his Sr. year. He was an All-American shot-put and discus track star, also. He was voted into the Ohio State University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1997 for both Wrestling and Track.
  • He played senior hockey with the Campbellton Tigers and Mount Allison University from 1924 to 1932. In 1932-33 he signed with the senior Moncton Hawks and won the Allan Cup in 1933 and 1934. After the Hawks folded in the middle of the 1934-35 season Miller signed with the Montreal Maroons and helped them win the Stanley Cup. In the middle of the 1935-36 season Miller was traded to the Montreal Canadiens with Toe Blake for Lorne Chabot. He retired at the end of 1936-37.
  • Bill Miller was a professional athlete.
  • Bill Miller ( - December 31, 1952) was a NASCAR driver from Evansville, IN. He competed in ten Sprint Cup Series events in his career, earning two top-tens. Miller's debut came in 1951, when he competed at Weaverville. Miller left a quick impression, driving through the field of thirty to record a 7th place finish. Although that would ultimately prove to be his career best, Miller ran well the rest of the year. He finished no worse than a 19th place run at Langhorne, recording top-fifteens at tough bullrings such as Mobile and Columbia and tacking on a ninth place showing at Macon. Miller's final four races came in 1952, and unlike the previous year they all proved to be a struggle. After tearing out a transmission to finish 44th in his season debut at Daytona Beach, Miller posted two straight top-twenty finishes: a 17th at Jacksonville and an 18th at Atlanta. But even those were DNFs in small fields. The only race he was running at the finish was his career finale, finishing 26th at Darlington.
  • Bill Miller played a pathologist in season two of Private Practice. He also played Dr. Mason in season three, a paramedic in season five and an officiant in season six. He was also a member of the production staff for Private Practice.
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