Leon Wagner Obituary

Baseball Almanac presents the actual word-for-word transcript from the obituary of Leon Wagner, taken from the Associated Press (via syndication).

"(Leon) Wagner was a professional actor for several years and had a role in Bingo Long's Traveling All Stars, a movie about a black barnstorming team. Always well-dressed, he owned a clothing store whose slogan was 'Buy Your Rags at Daddy Wags.'" - Author Rich Mazzeri in The BaseballLibrary.com

Leon Wagner Obituary

Appeared in Syndication (by the Associated Press) on January 4, 2004

Leon Wagner Obituary

Former Outfielder Leon Wagner Dies

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)—Leon Wagner, a former outfielder who hit 211 home runs in a 12-year big-league career, has died, the Anaheim Angels said Tuesday. He was 69.

The Angels said Wagner, who played for them from in their first three years of existence—from 1961-63—died of natural causes Saturday in Los Angeles.

Wagner was known as ``Daddy Wags'' during his playing days.

``Leon was one of the first true sluggers to don an Angels uniform and will be fondly remembered by the fans,'' said Tim Mead, the team's vice president of communications. ``The Angel family sends its deepest sympathies to the Wagner family.''

Wagner, a native of Chattanooga, Tenn., played in 442 games for the then-Los Angeles Angels, hitting 91 homers and driving in 276 runs.

He had team-leading totals of 37 homers and 107 RBIs in 1962, when he finished fourth in the AL Most Valuable Player voting, and 26 homers and 90 RBIs in 1963.

Wagner was traded to Cleveland for first baseman Joe Adcock and pitcher Barry Latman on Dec. 6, 1963. He played for the Indians for four-plus seasons before finishing the 1968 campaign with the Chicago White Sox.

He started and finished his big-league career with the San Francisco Giants, where he played in 1958-59 and again in 1969. He played one season for the St. Louis Cardinals before joining the Angels.

Wagner finished his career with a lifetime batting average of .272 and 669 RBIs.

Leon Wagner Obituary



Leon Wagner hit a game-winning pinch hit home run during the eleventh inning of a game played on August 15, 1965. Max Alvis had a pinch hit home run of his own in the ninth inning and together they combined to tie the Major League record for pinch-hit home runs during a single game (two).

Did you know that on April 12, 1960 Leon Wagner hit the first home run at San Francisco's $15 million dollar Candlestick Park?

The New York Giants signed Leon Wagner as a free agent prior to 1954, he debuted with the San Francisco Giants four years later, and ended his career with them eleven years after that; however, of the one-thousand three-hundred fifty two games he played in, only one-hundred seventy-two were in a Giants uniform.