Wilson was selected in the fourth round, 52nd pick overall of the
1950 NFL draft by the
Cleveland Browns under
Paul Brown, but opted for a baseball career after leaving Wisconsin. He was signed by the
Chicago White Sox as an amateur free agent in 1950, playing 85 games for them from 1951 to 1953. In May 1954, Wilson was traded to the Tigers in exchange for
Matt Batts. Wilson played for Detroit during seven seasons years from 1954 through 1960, before ending his career with the
Cleveland Indians in 1960. Wilson served as the primary catcher for Tigers pitcher
Frank Lary, who was known as
The Yankee Killer because of his 16–3 record against the
New York Yankees with Wilson catching. Wilson batted .354 in the 21 games where he was paired with Lary against the Yankees, .096 above his career average. His most productive season came in 1958, when he played in a career-high 103 games, while collecting a .299 average with a .373
on-base percentage and 10
stolen bases, eighth-best mark in the American League. The next season, he improved to a career-high range factor of 6.23 – 0.92 points above the league average.
Overview In 602 Major League Baseball games, 580 as a catcher, Wilson hit a .258 average and a .338 on-base percentage. Wilson's 1958 baseball card,
Topps No. 213, showed him in a truly bizarre pose. The company painted out the natural background of the pictures that year and, in a photo showing Wilson swinging his bat, painted the bat out of the picture too—showing Wilson looking as if his right arm had been
amputated a few inches below the shoulder. ==Later life==