Miller was drafted by the Brooklyn Tigers of the NFL but did not play professionally because of high blood pressure. He coached briefly at Notre Dame and as an assistant in 1946 for the Cleveland Browns in the All-America Football Conference (AAFC) before becoming a lawyer practicing in Cleveland. Working with Browns players including Dante Lavelli and Abe Gibron, he helped found the NFLPA in 1956 and served as its first legal counsel. He stayed in the position until 1968, the same year the union was recognized by the NFL. Miller continued to practice law in Cleveland, specializing in maritime and asbestos litigation, until his death in 2002.
Miller was a standout halfback at Notre Dame under head coach Frank Leahy starting in 1941.[1] He rushed for 151 yards in a 1942 game against Northwestern University, a single-game school record that stood until 1974.[1] In 1943, he led the nation in rushing with 911 yards.[1] He scored 13 touchdowns and came in fourth in Heisman Trophy voting as Notre Dame finished with a 9–1 win–loss record and won the national championship.[3] He was named a consensus All-American and was chosen to play in the College All-Star Game, a now-defunct annual matchup between the champions of the National Football League (NFL) and a squad of the best college players from around the country.[5] As he succeeded on the field, Miller's independent streak became increasingly apparent. To Leahy's frustration, he skipped spring practices every year of his Notre Dame career to play golf, but the coach did not discipline Miller because he was the team's best halfback.[1]
Coaching and legal career
Miller was selected by the NFL's Brooklyn Tigers with the third pick in the 1944 NFL draft.[5]High blood pressure, however, forced him to discontinue athletic activities. He stayed at Notre Dame in 1944 to coach and study law.[6] The following year, Miller took a job as an assistant coach for the Cleveland Browns, a team in the new All-America Football Conference coached by Paul Brown.[3] By the time he was hired by Browns owner Arthur B. McBride, whose son attended Notre Dame, he was studying law at Yale University and was a backfield coach for the school's football team.[7][8] Miller was the team's first hire, and joined the Browns on August 1, 1946. He returned to Yale Law School at the end of the year, after the Browns won the AAFC championship.[9][10][7]
Miller coached with the Browns for one year, drawing a $5,200 salary ($81,248 in 2023 dollars) that helped pay for law school.[7] After graduating, he became an attorney practicing in Cleveland and was the Browns' legal counsel until McBride sold the team in 1953.[7][11] In 1954, Browns endDante Lavelli and guardAbe Gibron approached Miller about forming a union to represent players in the NFL, to which the Browns had moved in 1950.[12] NFL salaries had gone up in the late 1950s compared to the decade before, but owners' profits were rising at an even more rapid rate as the sport gained in popularity.[13] Players complained about not receiving salaries for exhibition games or pre-season training camps to which more than 60 men often participated but only 36 came away with roster spots.[12][14]Major League Baseball players already had a players' union, and Lavelli and Gibron thought the NFL should have a similar organization advocating for their interests.[12][14]
The NFLPA demanded that players receive a $5,000 minimum annual salary and be paid during training camp and while unable to play due to football injury.[12] The owners made some concessions, but refused to recognize the union.[16] Miller threatened to sue the league under antitrust laws in 1957 unless owners recognized the union.[17] He testified before the U.S. Congress in NFL antitrust hearings that players were "mousetrapped" by the owners into disadvantageous contracts.[18] Miller earned $1,000 a year to advocate for the union, a salary some players said in 1960 was unjustified because of his tense relations with NFL owners and failure to get the union recognized.[19] In 1967, retired Browns defensive back Bernie Parrish said Miller did not do enough to meet the players' demands and Parrish tried to form his own union.[20]
Miller served as the NFLPA's lawyer until 1968, when he resigned to focus on representing individual players as an agent negotiating contracts.[21] The NFL officially recognized the union later in the year when the two sides negotiated their first collective bargaining agreement.[22] Cleveland coach Paul Brown disliked Miller so much for his work with the NFLPA that he had him scrubbed from the Browns' 1946 team picture.[3]
^"Creighton Miller to Help McKeever". The Milwaukee Journal. South Bend, Ind. United Press International. September 27, 1944. p. 6. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
Coughlin, Dan (2011). Pass the Nuts: More Stories About the Most Unusual People and Remarkable Events from My Four Decades As a Sports Journalist. Gray & Company, Publishers. ISBN978-1-59851-073-7.
Keim, John (1999). Legends by the Lake: The Cleveland Browns at Municipal Stadium. Akron, OH: University of Akron Press. ISBN978-1-884836-47-3.
Piascik, Andy (2007). The Best Show in Football: The 1946–1955 Cleveland Browns. Lanham, MD: Taylor Trade Publishing. ISBN978-1-58979-571-6.