The campaign was one of three full seasons Wahl spent at the major league level. He appeared in 71 games for the Reds, starting 28 games at
shortstop and 27 at
second base, and
batted .201 with 39
hits. On August 21, he had three hits in four at bats, including a
double and two
triples, but the Reds fell to the
Philadelphia Phillies, 6–3, at
Shibe Park. With the war over and major leaguers returning from military service, Wahl spent all of with the
Triple-A Syracuse Chiefs, where he played shortstop and batted .271 in 109 games. That led to another major league trial, and Wahl made the
1947 Reds as a backup third baseman and
utility infielder, but he could muster only 14 hits all season and he batted only .173 in 39 games. However, one of those hits was his first big-league
home run, a two-run blow off
Howie Pollet of the
St. Louis Cardinals on June 27 at
Sportsman's Park. makes the force out on Philadelphia Athletics third baseman Kermit Wahl during a game on July 27, 1950 at Cleveland Municipal Stadium Wahl played in the Triple-A
International League during the following two seasons, and was acquired by the Athletics from the
Brooklyn Dodgers' organization after he batted .286 in 134 games for the 1949
Montreal Royals. The season, his third and last full season in the big leagues, represented the high-water mark of his pro career. He reached career highs in games played (89),
runs scored (26), hits (72), doubles (12), triples (3), homers (2),
runs batted in (27), and batting average (.257). He became the Athletics' regular third baseman in July, after
Bob Dillinger was sold to the
Pittsburgh Pirates, and started 60 games at the hot corner through September 17. Wahl was not able to hold the starting third base job in , batting .186 in 20 games, and was traded, via the
Chicago White Sox, to the St. Louis Browns on June 4. Although he batted .333 in limited service for the Browns, he was traded for the third time that season, on July 31 to the
New York Yankees in a
waiver deal. However, he did not play at the major league level for the Yankees; he was sent to the Triple-A
Kansas City Blues and spent the remainder of his playing career in the
American Association, retiring after the 1954 season. As a major leaguer, Wahl registered 145 hits, including 23 doubles, six triples, and three home runs. ==Later years==