After his playing career, Norton had a long career in coaching and scouting.[2] He established Canada's Junior National Team and managed the Canada national baseball team at the 1975 Pan American Games.[2][11] In 1986, he established a baseball academy in Vancouver, the National Baseball Institute (NBI).[6] Players developed at NBI include Matt Stairs and Corey Koskie.[6]
Norton left NBI in 1994, worked as a scout for the Baltimore Orioles from 1996 to 1999, then moved to the Seattle Mariners in 2000.[6] He was hired into both organizations by Pat Gillick.[3] Norton scouted for the Mariners in Canada for 17 years,[6] and also scouted in Europe.[2] Canadian players he signed include Phillippe Aumont, Tyler O'Neill, James Paxton, and Michael Saunders.[6] In Europe, he signed players such as Greg Halman, Alex Liddi, and Dylan Unsworth.[6][b] Norton was honored as International Scout of the Year by the Mariners (2007), and twice was named Canadian Scout of the Year by the Canadian Baseball Network (CBN) (1998, 2013).[6] CBN named the Wayne Norton Award, presented to their selection for minor-league pitcher of the year, in his honor.[12]
Port Moody, when Norton grew up, honored him with a civic award in 2015,[13] and named the city's Wayne Norton Baseball Diamond in his honor in 2018.[14] Norton was diagnosed with ALS in 2015,[4] and continued to scout for the Mariners during the 2016 season despite his illness.[15] In June 2016, he was inducted to the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.[3] He threw out a ceremonial first pitch at Safeco Field in September 2017.[6] Norton died in January 2018, aged 75.[3] He was survived by his wife, a daughter, and a son.[6]
Notes
^The Athletics franchise was in Kansas City through 1967, then relocated and became the Oakland Athletics.
^Unsworth, born in South Africa, attended the European Baseball Academy in Italy.