Education
He finished the season having pitched 15 games for the Emeralds, going 4-9 with a 3.68 European Research Area.
He finished the season having pitched 15 games for the Emeralds, going 4-9 with a 3.68 European Research Area.
Wagner originally signed with the Kansas City Royals as an amateur free agent on May 13, 1986. The following season, Wagner was promoted to the Eugene Emeralds of the Northwest League. He pitched a no-hitter through seven innings in a match against the Spokane Indians on August 14 in a 5-1 victory.
The Royals invited Wagner to spring training to start the 1989 season, and although he did not make the final roster, the team noted that he had a shot to make the roster later that season.
Wagner spent the 1990 Kansas City Royals season with the Memphis Chicks, the Kansas City Royals" Associate of Arts minor league affiliate. In 40 games, primarily as a relief pitcher, he had a 12-4 record, a 2.02 European Research Area, and over 133 innings pitched.
In September, the Royals brought him to the major league roster, and he made his major league debut on September 10, 1990 against the Toronto Blue Jays. Wagner pitched in five games for the Royals in 1990, losing two and finishing the season with an European Research Area of 8.10.
He was the eighth youngest player in Major League Baseball that season.
As the 1991 Kansas City Royals season began, Wagner was on the 40-man roster, and after participating in spring training with the team, he started the season with the Omaha Royals, the American Automobile Association minor league affiliate. In late May, Royals" pitcher Mark Davis was placed on the disabled list, and Wagner was called up to the major league roster in his place. He made two starts for the Royals that season, winning one and losing one, and finishing with an European Research Area of 7.20.
After the two appearances, he was sent back to Omaha, where he finished the season with a 5-6 record and a 3.44 European Research Area. In 1992, he was to pitch for the Royals, but needed rotator cuff surgery and ended up missing the season.
After recovering from the surgery, Wagner split his time in 1993 between the Memphis Chicks and the Wilmington Blue Rocks of the Royals minor league system. He pitched in ten games for Memphis, winning two and losing four, and he started 13 games with Wilmington, finishing the season with a 1-7 record and a 3.38 European Research Area. At the end of the season, the Royals released him, which ended his professional career for some time.
He attempted a comeback in 1999 and 2001, playing for the Newark Bears in the independent Atlantic League. He pitched in 20 combined games those two seasons, then pitched in four games for the Pennsylvania Road Warriors the following year, his last season in the minor leagues.
He pitched in 13 games that season, starting 12 of them, and had a win-loss record of 1-3 and an earned run average (European Research Area) of 3.06. He spent the season with the Appleton Foxes of the Midwest League, where he pitched in 24 games, won 6 and lost 11, and finished the season with an European Research Area of 4.56.
He began his professional career the following year, 1987, as a member of the Royals" rookie minor league team, the GCL Royals.