In a 13-season career, Miller was a .245
hitter (695-for-2836) with five
home runs and 231
RBIs in 927
games played, including 229
runs, 97
doubles, 33
triples, and 40
stolen bases. In eight postseason games, he went 3-for-22 for a .136 average. As a catcher, he collected 3870
outs with 1053
assists and committed 135
errors in 5058
chances for a .973
fielding percentage. His best season was 1920, when he posted a career-high .289 average and led
National League catchers with .986 fielding percentage. Miller was also a participant in a historical play in the fifth inning of Game 5 of the
1920 World Series. He was tagged by
Cleveland Indians second baseman Bill Wambsganss for the third out in the only
unassisted triple play in
World Series history. After his playing career ended, Miller managed the
Atlanta Crackers in 1923 and was a coach for the Dodgers and
Boston Red Sox. Miller died in
Brooklyn at the age of 72, when he fell from a hospital window after
cataract surgery. File:Wamby19201010UATP.JPG|
Bill Wambsganss (top left, in white) tags out Miller to complete an
unassisted triple play in Game 5 of the
1920 World Series File:Wambsganss, and his tripple (sic) play victims, Kilduff, Mitchell & Miller of the Brooklyn B.B. Club LCCN89712599.jpg|Bill Wambsganss, and his unassisted triple play victims:
Pete Kilduff,
Clarence Mitchell and Miller File:Otto Miller (1912 baseball card).jpg|Miller's 1912
baseball card ==Postseason appearances==