He re-entered the draft in 1990; he was selected in the first round, seventh overall, by the Cincinnati Reds.[7] He signed in time to play 32 games with the Charleston Wheelers of the South Atlantic League.[8] He returned to Charleston at the start of the 1991 season, batting .315 in 52 games before earning a promotion to Class AA Chattanooga.[8] He started the 1992 season with Nashville in the Triple-AAmerican Association, and he batted .251 in 106 games there before earning a September callup to the major leagues at age 23.[8] He returned to the minor leagues the following year, going to the Indianapolis Indians since the Reds had changed their AAA affiliation after the 1992 season, and he played 51 games for the Indians as well as 36 games in the majors for the Reds.[1]
Seattle Mariners (1994–2005)
After the 1993 season, the Reds traded Wilson to the Seattle Mariners for second baseman Bret Boone.[9] He made the Mariners' roster out of spring training in 1994 and became an established major-league player, replacing Dave Valle as the M's catcher.[10] In his first full season in the majors, he struggled at the plate, batting .216, but he showed signs of his defensive ability with a .986 fielding percentage.[1] That turned out to be the lowest fielding percentage he would have in the years he spent as the Mariners' primary catcher.[1] The 1995 season went better for him; he played 119 games, batting .278 and raising his fielding percentage to .995, as the Mariners won the American League Western Divisionpennant.[1][11]
In 1996, Wilson set career highs with 146 games played, 18 home runs, 83 runs batted in, and a .774 OPS.[1] In addition, he made his only All-Star appearance.[1] Wilson hit three home runs in an April 11, 1996 game in Detroit.[12] The 1996 season was also his first working with starting pitcher Jamie Moyer.
Wilson was the battery-mate for Mariners pitcher Randy Johnson on June 24, 1997, when Johnson struck out 19 batters in a game against the Oakland Athletics, just one strikeout less than the major league single-game strikeout record of 20 strikeouts in a 9 inning game.[13] Approximately six weeks later on August 8, 1997, the battery-mates teamed up to strike out another 19 batters in a game against the Chicago White Sox.[14]
On May 3, 1998, Wilson hit an inside-the-parkgrand slam, an unusual feat for any ballplayer, and especially for a catcher.[15] Wilson remained a dependable battery mate for Mariners pitchers over the next several seasons. In the 2000 season, Wilson's numbers declined to a .235 batting average and .990 fielding percentage;[1] he was also limited to 90 games because of injuries. However, in 2001, he regained his form, playing 123 games (122 at catcher) and posting a .265 batting average and a .999 fielding percentage (one error in 744 total chances).[1] Although it was becoming late in his career, he posted a .295 batting average in 115 games for the Mariners in 2002, and a .998 fielding percentage over 96 games in 2003.[1] In what ended up being his last full healthy season in the majors, he batted .251 with 33 RBI in 2004.[1]
Wilson lost his starting job at the beginning of the 2005 season to Miguel Olivo. On May 4, he suffered a torn ACL in his right knee during a game against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Wilson had intended the 2005 season to be his last as a player, and he announced his retirement, effective at the end of the 2005 season, on September 12.[2] Although a torn ACL commonly keeps athletes sidelined for most of a season, Wilson spent most of the rest of the season rehabilitating his knee and was activated from the disabled list on Friday, September 30. He came back for one final inning on that night against the Oakland Athletics; he had not recovered enough to swing a bat, but he was able to crouch and throw. The Mariners' starting pitcher in that game was Jamie Moyer, with whom Wilson had formed a battery for 190 previous starts dating back to 1996. Moyer pitched to five batters in the inning, which ended when Bobby Kielty flied out to center field, and the Athletics scored no runs. Moyer went on to pitch seven more innings, and the Mariners defeated the Athletics, 4–1.[16][17]
Career statistics
In a 14-year major league career, Wilson played in 1,299 games, accumulating 1,097 hits in 4,186 at bats for a .262 career batting average along with 88 home runs and 519 runs batted in.[1] He ended his career with a .995 fielding percentage; the highest for a catcher in American League history, and the sixth highest in major league history.[2][18] Wilson led American League catchers twice in fielding percentage, twice in putouts, twice in baserunners caught stealing and twice in range factor.[1]
Wilson set an American League record for catchers with 1,051 putouts in 1997, the fourth highest season total for a catcher in major league history.[19] His 1,128 total chances in 1997 were the sixth highest season total for a catcher in major league history.[20] In 2001, Wilson committed only one error in 122 games, for a .9987 fielding percentage, the fourth highest season average in major league history.[21] He played in more games as a catcher than any other player in Mariners history (1,281).[3][22] He holds the Mariners career records for home runs by a catcher (including two inside-the-park home runs), and the team's single season record for catchers in RBI with 83 in 1996.[3]
Post-playing career
On January 17, 2012, Wilson was named to the Mariners Hall of Fame.[3][23]
Since 2011, he has appeared as one of the color commentators for Seattle Mariners baseball games on Root Sports. Notably, along with Dave Sims, Wilson called the game on August 15, 2012 when Félix Hernández pitched the first perfect game in Mariners' franchise history. He was also broadcasting on Root Sports on June 8, 2012 when six Mariners' pitchers combined for a no-hitter.
On November 3, 2013, the Mariners announced that Wilson would become the team's Minor League Catching Coordinator.[24]
On August 22, 2024, Wilson was hired by the Mariners to become their manager after Scott Servais was fired the same day.[25] On September 26, the Mariners were eliminated from the postseason.