Andrew Miller has been on several clubs throughout his traveling career in the majors. It all started when he was drafted back in 2006, 6th overall by the Detroit Tigers and agreed to a contract with a guaranteed value of $5.45 million and a signing bonus of $3.55 million on August 4, 2006. His stint with the Tigers would only last one season (2006-2007).

In 2007, Miller was traded to the Florida Marlins where he spent three seasons (2008-2010) with the Marlins. In 2010 Miller was then sent down to Triple-A New Orleans Zephrys, he was later called up to the majors that year. The up and downs didn't stop there. In 2011, Miller was once again traded, this time it was to the Boston Red Sox where has won a World Series trophy and has earned several awards. The trades once again kept Miller from growing with one certain team, this time he was shipped to the Baltimore Orioles where the club went on to make the playoffs and sweep the Detroit Tigers behind Miller's strong relief outings.

Fast forward to today, Miller is now a costless agent meaning any team can pick him up. Well, one team that is seriously wanting to pursue Miller is the St. Louis Cardinals. Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post Dispatch has reported that he's "been told a few times" the Cardinals will pursue Andrew Miller in costless agency. Miller thew 62 innings with a 2.02 ERA - he also held opponents a below average .153 batting average and a .456 OPS.

Miller could be one of the highest paid costless agent relievers this offseason. But one team that may pursue Miller is the Atlanta Braves. If you remember, back in June and July the Braves tried to get Miller from the Red Sox for some high end prospects in return, however that fell through. The Braves could deeply use a arm such as Miller, but they may pursue someone else instead of him.

Other teams to look that might go for Miller are high spender; New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers, Oakland Athletics, Chicago Cubs (wildcard team), Washington Nationals (wildcard team). The one team that will probably out duel all these teams listed is of course the St. Louis Cardinals. Why? They are always a contender, always make the playoffs, and have a great organization that is built around strong pitching and great defense.

  • Miller's career statistics through 2014 season: 
  • Win-Loss record: 30-38
  • Earned Run Average: 4.91
  • Strikeouts: 490