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WAGNER BECOMES MWBL
ALL TIME SAVES LEADER
It took seven years to collect over 200 saves
in his career, but one of those years didn’t count according to
Billy Wagner. The 2001 Season was a complete wash for Wagner. He
appeared in ten games, but didn’t record a single save. But on
Friday September 5th, 2003 “Billy the Kid” took the all time saves
lead, and like an old western film - headed off into the sunset
with it.
“Billy the Kid” as he is known in the Windy City has been a
fixture for the Mobsters since he was drafted back in
the Iowa Baseball Confederacy in 1994. Wagner has been a Mobsters
since day one of his professional career. General Manager of the Chicago Mobsters
John “Stray” Corrado said "Everything he's done, has been in a
Mobsters uniform. Wagner is and always will
be a very important part of this organization. He’s been our
closer here in the Mid-West Baseball League since the leagues
inception in 1997”.
Wagner who stands 5-11, with a 195-pound frame has always
been a source for teasing, leaving his powerful arm to gain him
respect among teammates. "I'm impressed with Billy because I'm
afraid my kids might not grow up to be as big as me," long time
teammate and Mobster Chipper Jones joked. "So when
I look at Billy size, I think that might be a good thing to turn
out small" Wagner was
thrilled with the fact that he now has the MWBL all
time saves
lead. "I didn’t feel any pressure to get this record. I feel like
I just went out there and tried to get the guys out in the ninth
inning. Simple as that," Wagner said. “It was unbelievable event
for me and the Mid-West Baseball League”.
1997 Wagner recorded 24 saves in his debut season in
the Mid-West Baseball League. It was well behind the Leagues top
save man that year Trevor Hoffman, who recorded 40, but Wagner
still had a solid year. He pitched 47 Innings, won 4 games, and
lost 3, while recording 24 saves, 40 strikeouts, and finished the
year with an amazing 2.11 ERA.
1998 Turned out to be another solid performance from
the left handed fireballer. Wagner was solid all year, and ended
up winning his first of four Rolaids Relief Man Awards. He pitched
fewer innings than the previous season only getting 34, but his
saves jumped up, finishing the year with 31 to lead the American
League, but once again fell short of Trevor Hoffman’s Mid-West
Baseball League mark of 40.
1999 was a disappointing year for Wagner, and his team.
The Mobsters finished the year with only 81 wins, a far cry from
Billy’s first two seasons with the Mobsters, where the team won
88, and 93 games. Wagner saw his ERA rise to 3.53, and his saves
fall back into the mid twenty’s, finishing the year with only 25.
Wagner vowed his 2000 numbers would improve, and did his best to
make that come true.
2000 was Billy Wagner’s finest year. Though he didn’t
lead the Mid-West Baseball League in saves, he did finish off the
year with his fist 40+ save year, notching exactly 40. He finished
second in saves to Mariano Rivera, who complied 42. Wagner
finished with a 1.51 ERA, finishing second again to Mariano Rivera
(1.41). But what topped Wagner’s year over Rivera’s, was his 11
wins. He topped Rivera in wins by 6, and that was enough to bring
home the hardware and his second Rolaids Relief Man Award. Billy
also pitched in his first All-Star game in 2000, and struck out
the first ever batter he faced in All-Star competition.

Warming up for a Wild Card Playoff Game in 2000, Wagner
felt a twinge in his left elbow. He tried to rest the arm the
following winter, but pitched ineffectively in 2001, missing most
of the season with what had been diagnosed as tendonitis, and
turned into a full-blown ligament tear. He watched helplessly as
his Mobsters finished that year at 107-55. That 2001 season, while
he was injured the Chicago Mobsters, turned to “Roller Coaster” –
Todd Jones, who recorded 29, saves. One has to wonder how many of
those saves Wagner might have seen, and what his numbers would be
like today, if he hadn’t have gotten injured.
Wagner returned to the bull pen and the closers role in
2002 and rediscovered his twentieth-century form as the Mobsters
rebounded to the top ranks of the American League, with a 109-53
record. Much thanks to the 100 mph cheese from Billy the Kid, who
once again was a feared closer who challenged hitters with his
explosive fastball. He did use his curve more, and he developed a
slider that was highly effective, though he still didn't use it
often enough as management would have liked. Wagner did a better
job of working both sides of the plate in 2002 with his fastball,
and his 65 strikeouts were his most since his career-high 77
whiffs in 2000. Wagner topped the 40 save mark for the second time
in his career with 40, and for the first time in his career, he
led the entire MWBL In saves. His 1.55 ERA nearly matched that of
his best season in 2000 (1.51) and Wagner once again took home the
Rolaids Relief Man Award, a much deserving honor, and the third of
his career.
2003 Brought some new arms to the top of the mound for
the Mobsters, With Octavio Dotel, Armando Benitez, & Ray King
leading the way they have as Wagner’s setup men, Wagner once again
topped 40+ saves, and was on his way to being named the American leagues Rolaids Relief
man for the fourth time in his career, and his second consecutive.
The Mobsters have no plans to move "Billy the Kid", "He's one of
our untouchables. I don't see anyone offering me enough to
trade Billy. He's family here". Billy Wagner, who
will ride off into the sunset in Windy City will start 2004
in a Mobster uniform for the 10th straight year in Chicago.
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