Tom,
Wet wilt is not a pathogen, rather a physical phenomena of submerged plants that can't cool themselves because the root systems have been oxygen deprived for so long that they loose their ability to take up water. I'm not aware of any turf breeder that has bred plants specifically for that situation.
Technically speaking, I'm not sure if bacteria wilt can be classified as pathogenic. Pathogenic organisms are fungal, whereas bacteria are - - - nasty little microscopic critters. Basically bacterial wilt is like clogging of the arteries. Once those critters set up shop in the vascular system of the plant they begin to multiply so quickly that they fill the entire artery until water can't pass through.
Now this issue of turf genetics is critical to our understanding because, as I have said on here before, you cannot coax a plant into performing beyond its inherant genetic attributes. There are those who think that depriving a plant of water and nutrients will somehow help it evolve into a stronger species. I think that is very naive to expect that.
It can happen like this with Poa annua, but that's about an 80 year process of natural selection. Poa has dominate and recessive genes. If 2% of the annual seed crop bares the recessive traits of the genes, and if by chance those plants just happen to prefer being cut lower than the mother plant can tolerate being cut, then those seeds have a chance of germinating and growing up to produce more seeds and more plants that like being cut short. But even for all this to happen there has to be a deliberate environmental conditioning taking place. This is why we have some remarkable Poa annua greens on the older golf courses. But they didn’t get that way overnight.