Orlando Cepeda | |
---|---|
First Baseman and Designated Hitter | |
Batted: Right | Threw: Right |
Born: September 17, 1937 | |
MLB Debut | |
April 15, 1958 for the San Francisco Giants | |
Final game | |
, 1974 for the Kansas City Royals | |
Career Statistics | |
Batting Average | .297 |
Home Runs | 579 |
RBI | 1,565 |
Teams | |
| |
Career Highlights and Awards | |
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Orlando Manuel Cepeda Penne (September 17, 1937 – June 28, 2024) was a Major League Baseball first baseman and right-handed batter who played with the San Francisco Giants (1958–66), St. Louis Cardinals (1966–68), Atlanta Braves (1969–72), Oakland Athletics (1972), Boston Red Sox (1973) and Kansas City Royals (1974).
Cepeda was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico. His father, slugger Pedro Cepeda, was a baseball legend in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean. Some called Cepeda the Babe Ruth of Latin America. Pedro's nicknames were Perucho and The Bull so Orlando became known as Peruchin and Baby Bull. He was also nicknamed as Cha-cha.
Biography[]
Baseball Career[]
In his first season in 1958, Cepeda batted .312 with 25 home runs and 96 runs RBI, led the National League in doubles (38), and was named Rookie of the Year. In 1967, he was named the National League MVP by hitting .325 and driving in 111 RBIs.
Cepeda was a 7-time All-Star (1959–64. 1967). He retired in 1975 after hitting a .297 BA with 379 homers and 1365 RBI in 17 seasons. Cepeda was the first designated hitter for the Boston Red Sox, and the second DH in all of MLB.
Retirement and Drug Problems[]
In 1975, after retirement, Cepeda was caught while picking up a marijuana shipment in San Juan airport. For this charge he was sentenced to five years of imprisonment, of which he served 10 months of actual jail time and then rest on sexual violated probation.
Induction to Hall of Fame[]
Orlando Manuel Cepeda Penne | |
"Baby Bull" | |
Inducted as a member of the San Francisco Giants (30) | |
Year Inducted: 1999 | |
First Year Elligible: |
Orlando Cepeda is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame |
This drug-related episode and conviction, caused Cepeda to have an extremely difficult time getting voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. By the early 1990s, when his time of eligibility was beginning to run out, many Puerto Ricans, celebrities and ordinary citizens alike, began to campaign for his induction. Many of his backers alleged that other members of the Hall of Fame had done things equal or worse than drugs and were still inducted. Some international celebrities, former teammates and others also joined in the campaign to have Cepeda elected. In 1994, his last year of eligibility by BBWAA voting, he came within only 7 votes of becoming elected. Jim Rice, who had the msot similar record to Cepedia, made it with 7 votes to spare in his last BBWAA eligibility election (2009).
Finally, in 1999, he was elected by the Hall's Veterans Committee, joining Roberto Clemente as the only other Puerto Rican in Cooperstown.
Humanitarian Efforts and Recognitions[]
Cepeda was recognized nationally for his humanitarian efforts as an ambassador for baseball. He served as an honorary spokesman for the Crohn's and Colitis foundation of America, and participated in Athletes against AIDS.
In an article in 1976 in Esquire magazine, sportswriter Harry Stein published an "All Time All-Star Argument Starter," consisting of five ethnic baseball teams. Cepeda, a Puerto Rican, was the first baseman on Stein's Latin team.
The Giants retired Orlando's number 30. It hangs on the facing of the upper deck in the left field corner of AT&T Park. He is currently working in the Giants front office.
Recent Drug Possession Charges[]
On Wednesday, May 2, 2007 in Solano County, Cepeda was booked into jail after a routine traffic stop on Interstate 880. He faces charges of marijuana possession and speeding. Cepeda posted a $10,000 bail and has been released from the Solano County jailhouse.
California Highway Patrol Officer Amy Mulata stopped Cepeda for speeding on Highway 12 just west of Highway 80 and smelled marijuana in the vehicle, the California Highway Patrol said. Mulata found a "usable amount of marijuana", a bindle containing a suspected controlled substance-believed to be either cocaine or methanphetamines-and one syringe, the CHP reported. The Lexus was searched with a narcotics dog and no additional drugs were found, the agency said.[1]
Cepeda has said through his attorney that the drugs weren't his and that they belonged to a relative with diabetes that had a prescription to use marijuana for medical purposes.[2]
Quotation[]
- "The trick against Don Drysdale is to hit him before he hits you." [1]
- "He is annoying every pitcher in the league. He is strong, he hits to all fields, and he makes all the plays. He's the most relaxed first-year man I ever saw." — Willie Mays about Cepeda (1958)
See also[]
- Top 500 home run hitters of all time
- Players from Puerto Rico in MLB
- List of famous Puerto Ricans
- Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame
External links[]
- Orlando Cepeda at:
Preceded by: Jack Sanford |
National League Rookie of the Year 1958 |
Succeeded by: Willie McCovey |
Preceded by: Hank Aaron |
National League RBI Champion 1961 |
Succeeded by: Tommy Davis |
Preceded by: Ernie Banks |
National League Home Run Champion 1961 |
Succeeded by: Willie Mays |
Preceded by: Jim Ray Hart |
Major League Player of the Month August 1967 |
Succeeded by: Don Drysdale |
Preceded by: Hank Aaron |
National League RBI Champion 1967 |
Succeeded by: Willie McCovey |
Preceded by: Roberto Clemente |
National League Most Valuable Player 1967 |
Succeeded by: Bob Gibson |
Template:Sports in Puerto Rico
- ↑ Bob Bensch (2007). Baseball's Hall-of-Famer Cepeda Arrested for Drugs. Retrieved on 2007-05-02.
- ↑ Noel Algarín (2007). Asegura la droga es de un pariente y es legal. Retrieved on 2007-05-03.