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Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13
Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston Astros stars Jeff Bagwell and Craig Biggio had simple instructions for rookie reliever Billy Wagner when he was called up in 1995 — 'Sit there. Don't talk. If we need something, we'll let you know.' On Saturday, with Bagwell and Biggio sitting to his left, the Astros retired Wagner's No. 13. The ceremony culminated three weeks of what Wagner called 'happy chaos' that started with his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame on July 27. 'Having your number put up in a rafter with the greats of the organization probably sits up there as being a Hall of Famer because you're representing a city, you're representing your team that you played for,' Wagner said. 'It means a lot.' Wagner became the 10th Astros' player to have his number retired, joining former Bagwell and Biggio, his teammates for the first nine seasons of his major league career, and who are the only other members of the Baseball Hall of Fame to be inducted as Astros. The 5-foot-10 pitcher was given the No. 13 as a joke by Abe Naff, his head coach at Division III Ferrum College in Virginia. Wallace Chitwood, a tall, strike-throwing, soft-tossing pitcher, wore No. 13 before Wagner, who was a polar opposite. 'Thirteen has just been that unlucky lucky number,' Wagner said. A first round pick in 1993, Wagner spent the first nine of his 16 major league seasons with the Astros. Three of his seven All-Star selections were with the Astros, and he is the club's saves leader with 225. Wagner was traded to the Phillies after the 2003 season. He also pitched for the New York Mets, and Boston Red Sox before closing out his career with the Atlanta Braves in 2010, finishing that season with 37 saves and a 1.43 ERA. 'I was tired of having my groins wrapped. I was tired of getting Toradol shots in my back, and my ankles wrapped every day,' Wagner said. 'It was easy at that time to walk away. When I tried to walk away it was with the understanding that I had done enough, and I liked being a dad.' Wagner is fourth on career saves list with 422. His .187 opponent batting average is the lowest in baseball history among relievers. ___ AP MLB: The Associated Press

Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13
Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston Astros stars Jeff Bagwell and Craig Biggio had simple instructions for rookie reliever Billy Wagner when he was called up in 1995 — 'Sit there. Don't talk. If we need something, we'll let you know.' On Saturday, with Bagwell and Biggio sitting to his left, the Astros retired Wagner's No. 13. The ceremony culminated three weeks of what Wagner called 'happy chaos' that started with his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame on July 27. 'Having your number put up in a rafter with the greats of the organization probably sits up there as being a Hall of Famer because you're representing a city, you're representing your team that you played for,' Wagner said. 'It means a lot.' Wagner became the 10th Astros' player to have his number retired, joining former Bagwell and Biggio, his teammates for the first nine seasons of his major league career, and who are the only other members of the Baseball Hall of Fame to be inducted as Astros. The 5-foot-10 pitcher was given the No. 13 as a joke by Abe Naff, his head coach at Division III Ferrum College in Virginia. Wallace Chitwood, a tall, strike-throwing, soft-tossing pitcher, wore No. 13 before Wagner, who was a polar opposite. 'Thirteen has just been that unlucky lucky number,' Wagner said. A first round pick in 1993, Wagner spent the first nine of his 16 major league seasons with the Astros. Three of his seven All-Star selections were with the Astros, and he is the club's saves leader with 225. Wagner was traded to the Phillies after the 2003 season. He also pitched for the New York Mets, and Boston Red Sox before closing out his career with the Atlanta Braves in 2010, finishing that season with 37 saves and a 1.43 ERA. 'I was tired of having my groins wrapped. I was tired of getting Toradol shots in my back, and my ankles wrapped every day,' Wagner said. 'It was easy at that time to walk away. When I tried to walk away it was with the understanding that I had done enough, and I liked being a dad.' Wagner is fourth on career saves list with 422. His .187 opponent batting average is the lowest in baseball history among relievers. ___ AP MLB:

Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13
Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13

Associated Press

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Associated Press

Astros retire Hall of Fame reliever Billy Wagner's No. 13

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston Astros stars Jeff Bagwell and Craig Biggio had simple instructions for rookie reliever Billy Wagner when he was called up in 1995 — 'Sit there. Don't talk. If we need something, we'll let you know.' On Saturday, with Bagwell and Biggio sitting to his left, the Astros retired Wagner's No. 13. The ceremony culminated three weeks of what Wagner called 'happy chaos' that started with his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame on July 27. 'Having your number put up in a rafter with the greats of the organization probably sits up there as being a Hall of Famer because you're representing a city, you're representing your team that you played for,' Wagner said. 'It means a lot.' Wagner became the 10th Astros' player to have his number retired, joining former Bagwell and Biggio, his teammates for the first nine seasons of his major league career, and who are the only other members of the Baseball Hall of Fame to be inducted as Astros. The 5-foot-10 pitcher was given the No. 13 as a joke by Abe Naff, his head coach at Division III Ferrum College in Virginia. Wallace Chitwood, a tall, strike-throwing, soft-tossing pitcher, wore No. 13 before Wagner, who was a polar opposite. 'Thirteen has just been that unlucky lucky number,' Wagner said. A first round pick in 1993, Wagner spent the first nine of his 16 major league seasons with the Astros. Three of his seven All-Star selections were with the Astros, and he is the club's saves leader with 225. Wagner was traded to the Phillies after the 2003 season. He also pitched for the New York Mets, and Boston Red Sox before closing out his career with the Atlanta Braves in 2010, finishing that season with 37 saves and a 1.43 ERA. 'I was tired of having my groins wrapped. I was tired of getting Toradol shots in my back, and my ankles wrapped every day,' Wagner said. 'It was easy at that time to walk away. When I tried to walk away it was with the understanding that I had done enough, and I liked being a dad.' Wagner is fourth on career saves list with 422. His .187 opponent batting average is the lowest in baseball history among relievers. ___ AP MLB:

Altuve's Go-Ahead Single Helps Astros Beat Rockies, Moves Him Into 2nd on Team Career Hits List
Altuve's Go-Ahead Single Helps Astros Beat Rockies, Moves Him Into 2nd on Team Career Hits List

Al Arabiya

time03-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Al Arabiya

Altuve's Go-Ahead Single Helps Astros Beat Rockies, Moves Him Into 2nd on Team Career Hits List

Jose Altuve hit a go-ahead two-run single in the sixth inning to move into second place on Houston's career hits list, and the Astros beat the Colorado Rockies 5–3 on Wednesday night to win their 12th straight series. Altuve went 2 for 5 and gave the Astros a 4–2 lead with his 2,315th career hit, moving him past Jeff Bagwell. Craig Biggio leads the franchise with 3,060 career hits. Hunter Brown (9–3) allowed two runs on six hits in six innings. He struck out eight to join Lance McCullers Jr. as the only Astros pitchers to reach 500 in their first 86 appearances. Bennett Sousa pitched the ninth for his third save. Jake Meyers had a one-out double off Austin Gomber in the first, and Altuve and Cam Smith followed with back-to-back singles for a 1–0 lead in the first. Rookie Shay Whitcomb hit his first home run 451 feet to left-center field for a 2–0 lead in the second. Cooper Hummel singled and Mauricio Dubón drew a walk off reliever Angel Chivilli (1–4) in the sixth. Altuve drove a two-out pitch from Jake Bird to center to score both. Smith followed with an RBI single for a 5–2 lead. Thairo Estrada went 3 for 4 and singled and scored ahead of Mickey Moniak's 12th home run to tie it 2–2 in the Rockies' second. Gomber allowed two runs on eight hits in five innings. Houston has won three in a row and 16 of 21. Key moment: Brown struck out Hunter Goodman in the third for No. 500 and then fanned Jordan Beck swinging on a 99.8-mph fastball–his fastest this season–to end the inning. Key stat: The Rockies have lost all 14 series at home, dropping the first two games 13 times. Up next: Astros LHP Brandon Walter (1–1, 3.34 ERA) starts Thursday's series finale opposite Rockies LHP Kyle Freeland (1–9, 5.56).

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