“This is the Professor!”

From 2013-15, Miller spent 79 games teaching the finer points of basketball to the young pupils within the Wizards’ locker room. Those kids — Bradley Beal and John Wall — are now the team’s top dogs and during Game 6 when the duo combined for 73 points in the closeout victory, Miller marveled at how they have grown.

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“They’re looking good,” Miller told The Post. “I mean, experience is coming. They’re on the job and learning a lot and they’re healthy. They’re leaders. They’re doing a great job.”

Ask Wall about his maturation as a point guard and he’ll name the teammates who served as mentors: Trevor Ariza, Paul Pierce and his backup for parts of two seasons, Miller.

“Picked his brain,” Wall once said of having Miller in the locker room.

And possibly, Wall picked up even more. While watching the action inside Philips Arena on Friday, Miller noticed Wall make a familiar move. He turned to his friend seated next to him, and exclaimed: “I gave him that move!”

Wall plays devilish delight while Miller operated for nearly two decades in the NBA with the slow, deliberate nature of a surgeon, so which move of his did Wall mimic? Hard to tell. However, Miller does not want to take too much credit because even as a younger player, he felt Wall “already had everything with him.” Similar to Beal, who was 20 years old when Miller came to the team.

During that 2013-14 season, Miller was the vet on the bench and the voice in the young player’s ears. The keys to the kingdom were already being handed to Wall and Beal, and the future looked bright as Washington advanced to the semifinals. However the team lost in six games to the Indiana Pacers — a series the Wizards truly could’ve controlled had it not been for a blown 19-point lead in Game 4 before a lack of execution buried them in the final game.

Three years later, and the Wizards nearly let a 22-point second-half lead over Atlanta slip through their hands until Wall’s career-defining fourth quarter. Wall outscored the Hawks, 19-17, in the final quarter, while also assisting on a clutch jumper by Beal and making the defensive play of the game with a chasedown block on Dennis Schroder.

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As Wall led the opposition against the Hawks’ rally, Miller noticed more than just a fancy move.

“I wasn’t there long but I was there long enough to see they were already mature,” Miller said of his time with the Wizards, “but now just some of the mental mistakes they made early on — which was small stuff — they’re passed that. They’re way ahead of the game, players of the future and hopefully they can keep pushing.”