Hall of Fame trainer Mack Miller dies

Hall of Fame trainer Mack Miller dies

Published Dec. 17, 2010 12:00 a.m. ET

Mack Miller, a Hall of Fame thoroughbred trainer who at 71 had his only Kentucky Derby winner in Sea Hero, has died. He was 89.

Miller was working for Paul Mellon's Rokeby Stable in 1993 when Sea Hero overcame 12-1 odds to win the Derby. He was fifth in the Preakness and seventh in the Belmont.

Mellon was 85 at the time, and when he closed his stable in North America in 1995, Miller retired.

''It's sort of a sad time,'' Miller said when he announced his retirement. ''I guess I'll feel lost about it. But when you reach this age, you've served your time. I couldn't go on forever.''

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He started out working for Calumet Farm in the late 1940s, where he offered to work for free. The farm hired him at $125 a month.

Miller had become interested in racing when his father took him to Keeneland in 1936.

''I looked at those horses and said, 'Gosh, they're beautiful, so shiny and slick,''' he said nearly 60 years later.

Later he started his own public stable and ''starved to death,'' he said, training horses in Ohio, Illinois, New Jersey and New York.

He trained the filly Oil Painting to five stakes victories in 1954, and the next year Leallah became the champion 2-year-old filly in North America under his tutelage, according to his obituary. He took over the stable of Charles Englehard six years later and stayed on for Englehard's wife after Englehard died in 1971 before going with Mellon in 1977.

Miller died Friday at the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center hospice unit in Lexington, according to a funeral home website. A memorial service was held Tuesday at Versailles Presbyterian Church.

He is survived by his wife, Martha McCauley Miller; daughter, Martha Queen of Chattanooga, Tenn.; son, MacKenzie Todd Miller Jr. of Austin, Texas; and two grandchildren.

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