Leon Wagner

Leon Wagner

Infobox MLB retired
name=Leon Wagner
position=Outfielder
bats=Left
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date|1934|5|13
Chattanooga, Tennessee
deathdate=death date and age|2004|1|3|1934|5|13
Los Angeles, California
debutdate=June 22
debutyear=by|1958
debutteam=San Francisco Giants
finaldate=October 2
finalyear=by|1969
finalteam=San Francisco Giants
stat1label=Batting average
stat1value=.272
stat2label=Home runs
stat2value=211
stat3label=Runs batted in
stat3value=669
teams=
* San Francisco Giants (by|1958-by|1959, by|1969)
* St. Louis Cardinals (by|1960)
* California Angels (by|1961-by|1963)
* Cleveland Indians (by|1964-by|1968)
* Chicago White Sox (by|1968)
highlights=
* 2x All-Star selection (1962, 1963)
* 1962 MLB All-Star Game MVP

Leon Lamar Wagner (May 13, 1934 - January 3, 2004) was an American left fielder in Major League Baseball who played with the San Francisco Giants (1958-59, 1969), St. Louis Cardinals (1960), Los Angeles Angels (1961-63), Cleveland Indians (1964-68) and Chicago White Sox (1968). He batted left-handed and threw right-handed. Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Wagner graduated from Tuskegee University. He was affectionately known as "Daddy Wags" during his playing days.

Career

In a 12-season career, Wagner was a .272 hitter with 211 home runs and 669 RBI in 1352 games.

Wagner was 24 years old when he broke into the big leagues on June 22, 1958. A solid line-drive hitter and colorful player, in his rookie year Wagner compiled a .307 batting average with 13 home runs in 74 games. With a congested outfield that included Willie Mays, Felipe Alou, Orlando Cepeda and Bill White, he was traded to the Cardinals after the 1959 season.

Wagner played a reserve role for St. Louis in 39 games and hit four home runs. Nevertheless, one of them was a notable one; he entered the major league record books by hitting the first home run ever at Candlestick Park on April 12, 1960, providing the only Cardinals run during a 3-1 loss against his former Giants team.

Traded to the expansion Angels in 1961, Wagner played his first regular season. He responded, hitting .280 with 28 home runs and 79 RBI in 133 games. His most productive season came in 1962, when he blasted 37 homers (third highest in the American League), and collected 107 RBI, 96 runs, 164 hits and 21 doubles, all career highs, while batting .268. That year he played in both All-Star games, and in the second contest he went 3-for-4 including a two-run home run, being named the game's Most Valuable Player. One of the first true sluggers in Angels history, Wagner hit 91 home runs with 276 RBI in 442 games. In 1963, after his second All-Star selection, he was sent to the Indians in the same trade that brought Joe Adcock to the Angels. Wagner had come to very much enjoy playing and living in Los Angeles, and was resentful toward the Angels over being traded. People who knew him said that he carried that resentment toward the team with him for the rest of his life.

As a Cleveland left fielder, Wagner hit 97 home runs from 1964-67. His best year with the Indians was 1964, when he hit 31 homers with 100 RBI and 94 runs. In 1965 he hit .294 with 28 homers. Wagner also compiled 26 stolen bases in 30 attempts in 1964-65.

Later in his career, Wagner was a respected pinch hitter, leading the AL with 46 appearances in 1968 while splitting the season between the Indians and White Sox. Purchased by the Cincinnati Reds in 1968, Wagner returned to the White Sox later in the year and was released after that. Then, he signed as a free agent with the Giants, making his final appearance in San Francisco on October 2, 1969.

After his playing career ended, Wagner enjoyed some small acting roles, prominently in John Cassavetes' 1974 film "A Woman Under the Influence", and as a member of Depression-era barnstorming team in "The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings" (1976).

On the whole, though, Wagner's life after baseball was not particularly successful--especially in financial terms. In his later years Wagner disappeared from the public eye, fell into substance abuse and was frequently homeless, living on the streets in South Los Angeles. At the end of his life, he had adopted a small electrical shed behind a video store in that area as a makeshift home. Wagner died in that shed of natural causes on January 3, 2004. His official obituary stated, not completely inaccurately, that he died 'at home'.

Fact

*Although Wagner debuted with the Giants in 1958 and ended his career with them eleven years later, of the 1152 games in which he played, only 172 were in a Giants uniform.

Quote

*Always well-dressed, he owned a clothing store whose slogan was "Buy Your Rags at Daddy Wags" - Rich Mazzeri, at Baseball Library [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/W/Wagner_Leon.stm]

Trivia

*Wagner was depicted on a 1969 "Topps" baseball card as a member of the Cincinnati Reds, but never played for them.

* Shortly after the Angels traded Wagner to Cleveland, Leon Schwab, who owned the famous drugstore in Hollywood, made a comment about Wagner that was printed in "Baseball Digest." Upon hearing that the Angels traded Wagner to the Indians for Joe Adcock and Barry Latman--Schwab's "son-in-law"--Schwab asked, "Is THAT all they got for Wagner?"

ee also

*Top 500 home run hitters of all time

External links

*baseball-reference|id=w/wagnele01
* [http://www.baseballhistorian.com/html/american_heroes.cfm?page=101 American Heroes]
*imdb name|id=0905990|name=Leon Wagner


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