Registration open for 17th annual Baseball Night in Blacksburg featuring Billy WagnerRegistration open for 17th annual Baseball Night in Blacksburg featuring Billy Wagner
Baseball

Registration open for 17th annual Baseball Night in Blacksburg featuring Billy Wagner

Virginia Tech head coach John Szefc proudly invites all into the baseball program's most premier annual event

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BLACKSBURG – Welcoming all into the program’s most premier event of the year, Virginia Tech baseball head coach John Szefc is thrilled to open public registration for the Hokies' 17th annual Baseball Night in Blacksburg, featuring special guest and keynote speaker Billy Wagner – 16-year MLB veteran, seven-time All-Star and revered closer who ranks eighth all-time in career saves (422).

This year’s banquet – hosted by emcee Evan Hughes, the radio voice of the Virginia Tech baseball team – is scheduled to take place on Saturday, Feb. 8, at The Inn at Virginia Tech.

Opening remarks will be made at 6 p.m., leading into a catered dinner service that will be followed by remarks by John Szefc and a Q&A session with Billy Wagner. Throughout the evening, Virginia Tech memorabilia will be available both for purchase and at auction until the event’s close at 9 p.m.

Billed as the formal kickoff to Virginia Tech’s spring season, Baseball Night in Blacksburg provides an intimate setting where guests can meet with VIPs and interact with current Hokies before the start of the 2025 campaign. Guests are asked to dress at minimum in business casual attire.

Tickets to Baseball Night in Blacksburg are available for purchase at $125 and are available by clicking here.

Reserved banquet tables (accommodating six dinner tickets alongside an event VIP) are available for purchase on a first-come, first-served basis. This year’s list of VIPs includes Frank Beamer, Brad Clotz, Gavin Cross, Erik Neander, Chad Pinder and Ian Seymour.

Additional reserved banquet tables (accommodating eight dinner tickets alongside two current Virginia Tech baseball team members) are also available for purchase. All banquet tables may be reserved by clicking here.

All Baseball Night in Blacksburg proceeds will go to support the Virginia Tech baseball team, especially its continual enhancements to English Field at Atlantic Union Bank Park and its accompanying facilities. Past banquets have supported the installation of artificial turf and expanded dugouts, among other general ballpark overhauls and additions.

Wagner – who was the featured guest at Baseball Night in Blacksburg in 2011 – will move into a distinguished class of multi-year keynote VIPs at the Hokies’ preseason banquet. Notable past speakers include: Cal Ripken Jr. (2008), Mike Williams (2010), Bobby Valentine (2012), Chuck Hartman (2014), Tim Kurkjian (2018), Ken Rosenthal (2020), Jeff Passan (2022), Chipper Jones (2023), Roger Clemens (2024) and others.

To register for Virginia Tech's 17th annual Baseball Night in Blacksburg, please click here. Those with questions may direct them to director of baseball operations, Cam Davis, by email at camd25@vt.edu.

 

BILLY WAGNER

A Virginia man through and through, Wagner was born in Marion and became a baseball product of Tazewell High School and Ferrum College, where he set the NCAA Division III career record for strikeouts per nine innings (16.14) – a feat that still stands today. During the 1993 MLB Draft, the left-hander was taken during the first round at No. 12 overall by the Houston Astros, with whom he would make his MLB debut in September 1995.

By 1997, Wagner was well on his way to cementing himself as Houston’s closer, stamping 23 saves and seven victories while eclipsing 14.00 strikeouts per nine innings for the first time during his MLB career. Two seasons later, he was selected to his first of seven All-Star Game rosters and received the 1999 National League Rolaids Relief Man Award, finishing the year with his lowest ERA to date (1.57) and highest counts to date in saves (39), strikeouts (124) and innings pitched (74.2).

Wagner went on to make two more All-Star rosters as a member of the Astros in 2001 and 2003 before his trade to Philadelphia ahead of the 2004 season. In 2003, he converted 44 saves (career high) and toed a 1.78 ERA as the National League’s most entrusted closer, leading the league in games finished (67).

From 2005 to 2010, Wagner’s final six MLB seasons were highlighted by four All-Star selections spanning stretches with three National League East clubs: Philadelphia (2005), New York (2007, 2008) and Atlanta (2010). Considering his entire 16-year career, he banked 25 or more saves during 10 seasons, registering 47 wins, a 2.31 ERA and 1,196 strikeouts.

Wagner – a 2020 inductee into the Houston Astros Hall of Fame – remains on the cusp of earning induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. During the Class of 2024 vote, he received 73.8 percent consideration from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) during his ninth of 10 seasons on the ballot.