logo
Who is Mercy Miller? Master P's son plays guard for Houston's 2025 Final Four team

Who is Mercy Miller? Master P's son plays guard for Houston's 2025 Final Four team

USA Today05-04-2025

Who is Mercy Miller? Master P's son plays guard for Houston's 2025 Final Four team
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Duke coach Jon Scheyer previews Houston matchup in March Madness
Duke plays Houston in the Final Four of March Madness. Here's what Jon Scheyer had to say Thursday at the Alamodome in San Antonio.
Though it lacks much of the obvious starpower of Duke — its opponent in the Final Four — Houston has been one of the central characters of the 2024-25 men's college basketball season.
The Cougars — the program of Hakeem Olajuwon, Clyde Drexler and the Phi Slamma Jama teams of yore — have enjoyed a rebirth under coach Kelvin Sampson, making the NCAA Tournament each of the past seven years it was held after missing it all but one year from 1993-2017. In recent years, they've been dominant, going 159-23 since the start of the 2020-21 season, a stretch highlighted by a pair of Final Four appearances.
This season has been perhaps their best yet, with a 34-4 record and Big 12 regular season and tournament championships. A number of players have made those achievements possible, from All-American guard LJ Cryer to bruising big man J'Wan Roberts.
REQUIRED READING: Kelvin Sampson heads to Final Four having rebuilt Houston basketball and coaching career
The notable names on the Cougars' roster hardly end there. There's another Houston player that, based on his name and appearance, might make a hip-hop-inclined viewer say 'Hmm.'
Mercy Miller is a freshman guard for Sampson's squad who has been a contributor off the bench for much of the season, having appeared in 22 of the team's 38 games. To at least a portion of the millions of viewers who will be tuning into the Cougars' Final Four matchup Saturday against Duke at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Miller is known for reasons that go beyond basketball — he's the son of hip-hop artist, producer and mogul Master P.
Here's a closer look at Miller, including his career and his famous family:
Master P son Houston basketball
Long before his Houston team reached the Final Four, Miller was used to the spotlight. If anything, he was born into it.
Miller is the son of Percy Miller, better known as Master P, a New Orleans-born rapper, producer, record company executive and entrepreneur who gained fame in the 1990s as the founder of No Limit Records.
Though he'd already compiled an impressive discography by that point, both as a solo artist and a member of the hip-hop group TRU, Master P became a global superstar with the release of his 1997 album 'Ghetto D,' which included the popular singles 'I Miss My Homies' and 'Make 'Em Say Uhh!' The latter of those songs is his most famous to date, in part because of a music video featuring Miller and others on the track taking part in a basketball game that included Shaquille O'Neal and a gold-plated tank.
Master P's basketball connections don't stop there. No Limit Records collaborated with his hometown New Orleans Pelicans on a jersey and other clothing. He was named the President of Basketball Operations for the New Orleans Privateers, and has alluded to wanting to be on the bench for the Pelicans at some point.
Fittingly, his family found its way into the sport, as well.
Master P himself as a basketball player growing up and even earned a scholarship to Houston before dropping out months into his freshman year.
Mercy, the youngest of nine children, is one of a handful of Miller siblings who have competed at the Division I level. His oldest brother, Romeo — best known as Lil' Romeo, whose self-titled 2001 album went gold — played for two seasons at USC from 2008-10. Another one of his brothers, Hercy, wrapped up his senior season last month at Southern Utah after previous stops at Tennessee State and Louisville.
Master P has been an active presence in his sons' basketball careers.
"He's super present," Mercy Miller said to the Indianapolis Star last week. "He gives me a whole bunch of advice. ... The biggest thing with him is about your mindset. He just wants me to have confidence in everything I do, knowing how much work I put in and just telling me to remain humble. At the end of the day, God blessed me with everything we have, so just remain humble, give God the glory and be confident that you put in the work."
Mercy Miller has interests beyond the court, as well.
He has shown his father's entrepreneurial spirit through various NIL arrangements, including a $1.4 million deal with frozen Greek yogurt company Sweetkiwi. In November 2022, he started the Lord Have Mercy Foundation, which helps underprivileged children and their families. He was compelled to start the organization as a way to give back after an affluent upbringing in Los Angeles (in contrast to his father's early life in the projects of New Orleans).
"It's super important to give back to the community to people who don't have as much as I've been blessed to have," Miller said to the Indianapolis Star. "That's just been something that's instilled in me. Seeing my dad, seeing his family and a lot of people that come from places where they weren't blessed with much. So, just trying to give people the opportunity to see different things in life. That's what I want to do."
Mercy Miller stats
Miller has been a role player off the bench for Houston this season. As a freshman, the 6-foot-4 guard is averaging 2.7 points, 1.9 rebounds, 0.4 assists and 0.3 steals per game while shooting 25.4% from the field and 17.9% from 3-point range in 8.5 minutes per game.
He had a career-high 12 points and four steals in his second game of the season, a 91-45 victory against Louisiana on Nov. 13. He has played sparingly of late and hasn't appeared in a game since the Cougars' first-round NCAA Tournament victory against SIU Edwardsville.
Mercy Miller 247
Though his contributions as a freshman have been limited, Miller arrived at Houston with an impressive profile.
Miller was a four-star prospect in the 2024 recruiting class, with 247Sports' composite ranking having him as the No. 83 player nationally. He committed to Houston in August 2021 after also being recruited by Minnesota and Missouri.
As a senior at Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, California, he averaged 29.8 points, 9.3 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game while shooting 51% from the field. He set a school single-game record with 68 points in a win against Oakwood High School, draining 28 of his 38 shots.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gayle Benson: 'To Our Knowledge' Fair Grounds 'Is Not For Sale'
Gayle Benson: 'To Our Knowledge' Fair Grounds 'Is Not For Sale'

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Gayle Benson: 'To Our Knowledge' Fair Grounds 'Is Not For Sale'

Gayle Benson: 'To Our Knowledge' Fair Grounds 'Is Not For Sale' originally appeared on Paulick Report. After news broke Tuesday that Churchill Downs, Inc. had sent a letter to the Louisiana State Racing Commission revealing its plan to 'begin the next steps' to relinquish its live racing license, several names were bandied about the public sphere as potential buyers for the Fair Grounds Racetrack in New Orleans. According to among the names suggested was Gayle Benson. Benson is a prominent Thoroughbred owner via her G M B Racing, as well as the owner of the New Orleans Saints NFL team and Pelicans NBA team. Advertisement Benson issued a public statement via Saints and Pelicans executive Greg Bensel: 'With the recent news generated by Churchill Downs concerning their continued racing at Fair Grounds, we have had numerous calls regarding our interest in purchasing the Fair Grounds. Mrs. Benson continues to support the horse racing industry not only in Kentucky but more importantly here in Louisiana. "She has always maintained a great relationship with the leadership at Churchill Downs and certainly has been monitoring this situation at the Fair Grounds. Her hope is that horse racing continues in New Orleans at the Fair Grounds and is prosperous and sustainable. "It is an important and iconic industry that we cannot lose. To our knowledge, which is very limited relative to the operations of the Fair Grounds, it is not for sale. Our focus is on Saints minicamp and the upcoming NBA Draft.' This story was originally reported by Paulick Report on Jun 12, 2025, where it first appeared.

A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities
A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities

HOUSTON — An answer to the Houston Astros' most apparent need is already in their clubhouse. He switched lockers some time last month, hoping to harness a sliver of luck amid an otherwise subpar season. Christian Walker went 8-for-42 across his next 12 games, negating whatever nirvana the superstition may have spurred. He averaged at least a 96.5 exit velocity during eight of those 12 contests, continuing a confluence of poor luck and putrid results. Advertisement 'Sometimes it can get really frustrating when you don't get your hits,' manager Joe Espada said. 'You see other players (get) end-of-the-bat knocks, and they get lucky on some of these balls. You as a hitter, you're like, 'Man, I'm doing everything I can to put the barrel on the ball and they're not falling for me.'' Few aspects of Walker's horrific start have been more frustrating. Stretches of three or four games have offered hope for a turnaround, only for the subsequent seven or eight to erase all momentum. For instance, he had a three-RBI game on May 11, only to follow it with a 5-for-47 funk. So, assign proper perspective to Walker's first four-RBI game as an Astro on Wednesday night. The beleaguered first baseman broke out of a brutal slump in a season full of them, spearheading a 10-2 shellacking of the Chicago White Sox with his first three-hit game since May 25. ALL-STAR SMASH.#VoteWalker ⭐️ — Houston Astros (@astros) June 12, 2025 Walker's performance raised his OPS to .653. He hasn't had a higher one since that aforementioned outburst on May 11. The anemia that followed is the story of Walker's season. Whether he can avoid it is the Astros' most pertinent question. Parlaying a performance like Wednesday into something more sustainable would crystallize the club's focus toward the July 31 trade deadline. A left-handed hitter and starting pitcher sit atop the Astros' wish list, but any prolonged success from Walker may alter their priorities. The development would lessen Houston's urgency to address a lineup still missing Yordan Alvarez, its most potent left-handed threat. Alvarez's return — whenever it arrives — already represents a pseudo-deadline acquisition, but pairing him with a well-performing Walker would be a permutation Houston hasn't yet seen this season. Advertisement 'The nature of the at-bats — taking good pitches, swinging at good pitches — I feel good,' Walker said. 'I'm happy with how competitive I feel in the box right now.' Walker still awoke Wednesday with a .623 OPS. Of the 17 qualified major-league hitters with a lower one, only Michael Harris III and Willy Adames had taken more plate appearances. Of the 27 players worth fewer wins above replacement, just Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez had played more than Walker. Like Perez, Walker has salary, service time and status as a respected veteran that afford an almost endless runway to correct whatever ails him. Houston's lack of other options only widens it. Walker will start at first base and slot somewhere in the middle of the Astros' order regardless of what the club does during the trade deadline. Espada slid Walker to the five-hole before the series opener against the White Sox on Tuesday. In 147 plate appearances as the cleanup hitter, Walker slugged .296. 'It's trusting the process and having the confidence that, at some point, this is going to turn,' Espada said. 'He knows this tide will turn for him.' Finding better fortune is a factor, but Walker still boasts his highest chase rate, whiff rate and strikeout rate of the past four seasons. He entered Monday with a .208 batting average and, according to Statcast, a .243 expected batting average. Forty-three of Walker's 74 strikeouts have come with a runner on base, problematic for an offense that has scored the sport's seventh-fewest runs. Whether a wholesale turnaround from Walker and full health from Alvarez will fix that is what general manager Dana Brown must ponder over the next seven weeks. Even if both of those circumstances come to pass, a left-handed bench bat or outfield platoon partner would be beneficial for an imbalanced roster. Either would profile as cheaper for an Astros team short on tradeable assets. Focusing the few they have on fortifying a pitching staff staggered by injuries is another byproduct of Walker's potential renaissance. Advertisement Gauging whether one is looming is difficult. Hammering a hanging slider for a two-run home run during Wednesday's first inning ignited the dugout, but it should be standard for someone of Walker's caliber. A more telling sequence came two frames later. Four-seam fastballs have flummoxed the first baseman all season, strange for a player who produced a run value of nine against the pitch last year, according to Baseball Savant. Walker entered Wednesday with a minus-1 run value against the pitch. His .203 batting average against them was 43 points lower than last season and 79 away from the career-best mark he established in 2023. Opponents are aware and attempting to seize advantage. During the third inning, White Sox starter Sean Burke believed he did. Walker waved through one of his elevated four-seamers to even the count at 1. 'It's something we're working on for sure, but it's hard to plan for that,' Walker said. 'You start looking at the top and you get your hanger and you miss it because you're looking for something else.' Drivin' in the runs. #VoteWalker ⭐️ — Houston Astros (@astros) June 12, 2025 Part of Walker's work to remedy the problem involves 'maybe daring guys to go up there,' reasoning that 'if they miss a spot two inches, three inches lower, now we're talking about a ball that can get hit 107, 108 (mph).' Burke did. The 1-1 four-seamer he threw grazed the top rail of Walker's strike zone. He struck it 106 mph into the left-center field gap. Two runs came home. 'It felt good to turn that around,' Walker said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store