Joe Pepitone

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Joe Pepitone
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Pepitone at the 2009 Yankees' Old-Timers' Day
First baseman / Center fielder
Born: (1940-10-09)October 9, 1940
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Died: Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
Batted: Left Threw: Left
Professional debut
MLB: April 10, 1962, for the New York Yankees
NPB: June 20, 1973, for the Yakult Atoms
Last appearance
MLB: May 25, 1973, for the Atlanta Braves
NPB: August 19, 1973, for the Yakult Atoms
MLB statistics
Batting average .258
Home runs 219
Runs batted in 721
NPB statistics
Batting average .163
Home runs 1
Runs batted in 2
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Joseph Anthony Pepitone (October 9, 1940 – March 13, 2023) was an American professional baseball first baseman and outfielder who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Yankees, Houston Astros, Chicago Cubs, and Atlanta Braves from 1962 to 1973 and for the Yakult Atoms of Nippon Professional Baseball in 1973. Pepitone was a three-time MLB All-Star and won three Gold Glove Awards.

Early life

Pepitone was born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in Park Slope. He had two younger brothers. Pepitone attended Manual Training High School.[1]

Pepitone was shot by a classmate at the age of 17 while at school, the same week that his father died at 39 years old due to a stroke. He did not press charges against the shooter.[2]

Baseball career

New York Yankees

In August 1958, Pepitone signed with the New York Yankees as an amateur free agent. He played in 16 games for the Auburn Yankees of the Class D New York-Pennsylvania League after signing.[1]

After playing four seasons in the minor leagues, he broke in with the Yankees in 1962, playing behind Moose Skowron at first base. He batted .239 in 63 games in 1962.[1] Yankees management believed he could handle the first base job and traded Skowron to the Los Angeles Dodgers before the 1963 season. Pepitone batted .271 with 27 home runs and 89 runs batted in (RBIs) in 1963. In the 1963 World Series, he committed a costly error. With the score tied 1-1 in the seventh inning of Game Four, he lost a routine Clete Boyer throw in the white shirtsleeves of the Los Angeles crowd, and the batter, Jim Gilliam, went all the way to third base and scored the Series-winning run on a sacrifice fly by Willie Davis. In 1964, Pepitone batted .251 with 28 home runs and 100 RBIs.[1] In the 1964 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, he hit a grand slam in Game 6,[3] but the Yankees lost the series.[1]

Pepitone batted .247 in 1965 and .255 in 1966, as the Yankees finished 70-89. He batted .251 in 1993 games in 1967 and .245 in 108 games in 1968.[1] Pepitone began to feud with the Yankees in 1969, leaving the team without permission for two days in August.[4] He batted .242 with 27 home runs in the 1969 season.[1]

Later career

After the 1969 season, despite having won his third Gold Glove Award, the Yankees traded Pepitone to the Houston Astros for Curt Blefary.[5] Unhappy with how he was treated by the Astros, he threatened to retire in July 1970.[6] The Astros sold Pepitone to the Chicago Cubs on waivers a week later.[7] In Chicago, Pepitone replaced Ernie Banks at first base. Pepitone retired in May 1972,[8] but returned to the Cubs after a few weeks away from the team.[9] The Cubs traded Pepitone to the Atlanta Braves for Andre Thornton, and cash considerations on May 19, 1973.[10] In Atlanta, he played only three games, after which he announced his intention to retire.[11]

Pepitone then announced his intention to continue his career in Japan.[12] In June 1973, Pepitone accepted an offer of $70,000 ($373,000 today) a year to play for the Yakult Atoms in Nippon Professional Baseball's Central League.[13] In July, he returned to the United States.[14] While in Japan, he hit .163 with one home run and two RBIs in 14 games played. Pepitone spent his days in Japan skipping games for claimed injuries only to be out at night in discos, behavior which led the Japanese to adopt his name into their vernacular—as a word meaning "goof off."[15]

Life after baseball

Memoirs

Jim Bouton wrote about Pepitone in his 1970 book Ball Four. Bouton said that Pepitone went nowhere without a bag containing hair products for his rapidly balding head and that he took to wearing toupees.[16]

In January 1975, Pepitone published his own tell-all baseball memoir, titled Joe, You Coulda Made Us Proud. The book received substantial attention for its many revelations, particularly about his abusive father and his self-lacerating candor about his self-destructive ways. Later that year, he posed nude for Foxy Lady magazine, featuring full frontal nudity.[17]

Professional softball career

During the late 1970s and early 1980s, several men's professional slow-pitch softball leagues were formed in the United States to build on the growth and talent in the booming men's amateur game during this period.[18][19] The American Professional Slo-Pitch League (APSPL) was the first such league, launching in an era of experimentation in professional sports leagues.[20] The APSPL was formed in 1977 by former World Football League executive Bill Byrne who would go on to form the Women's Professional Basketball League.[21] Former New York Yankees star Whitey Ford was the first league commissioner.[22][23][24]

A number of prominent athletes from other sports came to the men's professional softball leagues when that sport became established. MLB baseball veterans Jim Rivera, Curt Blefary, and Milt Pappas managed teams.[25][18][26] Players included former National Football League stars Billy "White Shoes" Johnson and Bob Lurtsema, and retired Major League Baseball players Ralph Garr, Norm Cash, Jim Price, Darrel Chaney, Jim Northrup, Mickey Stanley, Dick McAuliffe, and Zoilo Versalles.[27][28] Few had much success in professional softball, playing part-time and promotional roles.[29][30][31][32][33]

The notable exception was the former major-leaguer Pepitone, who first played for the Trenton Statesmen. Pepitone put up respectable numbers in 1978 (110-225, .489, 14 HRs, 61 RBIs) and 1979 (50-122, .410, 9 HRs, 30 RBIs). The Detroit Caesars would even offer $30,000 to the Statesmen to buy Pepitone's contract in 1978.[34] That offer was rejected.[35] After the New Jersey franchise disbanded in 1979, Pepitone went on to serve as the team President and played first-base for Chicago Nationwide Advertising of the North American Softball League (NASL) during their 1980 season.[36][37] Pepitone would get a suspension during the year for "conduct detrimental to professional softball" when NASL Commissioner Robert Brown suspended him for 6 games[38] and then was lost for the season in August with a thigh injury.[39] The Yankees then hired him as a minor league hitting instructor at the end of the NASL season, bringing his professional softball career to a close.[40]

MLB coaching

In October 1980, Pepitone was hired as a minor league hitting coach with the Yankees[40] and brought to the major league club in June 1982.[41] He was replaced by Lou Pinella in August of that summer.[42] Yankee owner George Steinbrenner again hired Pepitone in 1988 after release from prison to serve in the development of minor league players.[43] Pepitone received a 1999 World Series ring for his relationship with the Yankees. He subsequently sold that ring at auction.[44]

Personal life

Pepitone and two other men were arrested in Brooklyn on March 18, 1985, after being stopped by the police for running a red light.[45] The car contained nine ounces of cocaine, 344 quaaludes, a free-basing kit, a pistol, and about $6,300 in cash.[46] Pepitone denied knowing there were drugs and guns in the vehicle.[47] He spent four months at Rikers Island jail in 1988 for two misdemeanor drug convictions.[45]

In January 1992, Pepitone was charged with misdemeanor assault in Kiamesha Lake, New York, after a scuffle police said was triggered when Pepitone was called a "has-been." He was arraigned in town court and released after he posted $75 bail.[48] In October 1995, the 55-year-old Pepitone was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated after losing control of his car in New York City's Queens-Midtown Tunnel. Police found Pepitone bloodied, disoriented, and mumbling as he walked through the tunnel. Authorities charged Pepitone with drunken driving after he refused to take a sobriety test.[49] Pepitone pleaded guilty. When asked if he was staying away from alcohol, Pepitone responded: "I don't drink that much."[50]

Pepitone was married three times, all ending in divorce. He had five children.[1]

Pepitone died at his daughter's home in Kansas City, Missouri on March 13, 2023, at the age of 82.[51]

References

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  15. Markusen, Bruce. "Card Corner: 1973 Topps: Joe Pepitone," Hardball Times (May 31, 2013).
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Books

  • Bouton, Jim, and Leonard Shecter. Ball Four; My Life and Hard Times Throwing the Knuckleball in the Big Leagues. New York: World Pub. Co., 1970. 400 pages. (ISBN 0-9709117-0-X)
  • Pepitone, Joe, and Berry Stainback. Joe, You Coulda Made Us Proud. Chicago: Playboy Press, 1975. 246 pages. (ISBN 0-87223-428-2)
  • Pepitone, William A., and Joseph V. Soul of a Yankee: The Iron Horse, the Babe and the Battle for Joe Pepitone. Morrisville, North Carolina: Self-Published through lulu.com, 2011. 130 pages. (ISBN 0-55774-941-7)

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