The Boston Globe

Fritz Peterson, who traded his wife with a teammate, 82

- By Bruce Weber

Fritz Peterson, who was a stalwart pitcher for the ineffectua­l New York Yankees of the late 1960s and early ’70s, but whose lingering renown derived more from one of baseball’s most notorious “trades” — his exchange of wives with a teammate — has died. He was 82.

His death was announced Friday by Northern Illinois University, his alma mater, and the Yankees. Neither announceme­nt said when or where he died or cited a cause.

Mr. Peterson had previously battled prostate cancer, and in 2018, he disclosed in an interview with The New York Post and in a Facebook post that he had Alzheimer’s disease.

Mr. Peterson had the misfortune of joining the Yankees in 1966, when the team finished last in a 10-team American League, near the start of one of the more miserable stretches in team history.

Over his eight full seasons in New York, the Yankees never finished higher than second and managed to win more than they lost just four times. Mickey Mantle, the last vestige of sustained Yankee glory, retired; attendance in the Bronx slid to its lowest since World War II, just before George Steinbrenn­er and other investors bought the team from CBS, which sold it at a loss for $10 million, essentiall­y a pittance.

In this gloomy era, Mr. Peterson was a leading light. Sharing the top of the rotation with another unlucky Yankee, Mel Stottlemyr­e (who had at least gotten to pitch for the pennant-winning 1964 squad), Mr. Peterson won 109 games, including 20 in 1970, when he made his only All-Star team, and averaged more than 17 wins over a fouryear stretch from 1969 to 1972.

A left-hander, he did not overpower hitters. But he changed speeds effectivel­y, employing a variation on a changeup called a palm ball, and he had superb control. He had the fewest walks per nine innings in the AL for five straight seasons. For his career, he averaged just 1.7 walks per game.

He was also known as a prankster who relished the childishne­ss that flourished in the locker room. On the road with the Yankees, he roomed for a time with Jim Bouton, the pitcher and baseball iconoclast who would later become best known for his memoir “Ball Four.” The book undermined their friendship, but before that, they were partners in clubhouse mischief; they once loaded the hair dryer of their coiffure-sensitive, toupee-wearing teammate Joe Pepitone with talcum powder.

Mr. Peterson’s own memoir, “Mickey Mantle Is Going to Heaven” (2009), is one of the odder artifacts of baseball literature. A combinatio­n of storytelli­ng — from the ballpark and from the meandering path of Mr. Peterson’s journey to Christian evangelism — it ends several chapters by speculatin­g about which of Mr. Peterson’s former teammates would go to heaven (Mantle and Bobby Murcer) and which would not (Bouton).

But none of Mr. Peterson’s on-field achievemen­ts or offfield eccentrici­ties proved to be as memorable as the disclosure, in March 1973, that he and another Yankee pitcher, Mike Kekich, were living in each other’s house with each other’s wife and children. As a headline in The Daily News declared, “2 Yank Pitchers Trade Wives: Peterson, Kekich Hurl Change-Ups.”

The two men, who each had two young children, had known each other since 1969 after Kekich was traded to the Yankees by the Los Angeles Dodgers. They had become close friends, had gotten to know each other’s wives, and by the summer of 1972 were discussing the evident fact that Mr. Peterson and Susanne Kekich had fallen in love, as had Kekich and Marilyn Peterson.

Their solution was for the men to switch not just wives but families, with the Kekiches’ daughters, Kristen, 5, and Reagan, 2, joining their mother at Mr. Peterson’s house, and the Petersons’ sons, Gregg, 5, and Eric, 2, moving in with Kekich. In interviews at the time, the couples both said that the socalled scandal was hardly scandalous. “It wasn’t a wife swap,” Kekich said. “It was a life swap. We’re not saying we’re right and everyone else who thinks we’re wrong are wrong. It’s just the way we felt.”

The relationsh­ip between Mike Kekich and Marilyn Peterson dissolved shortly after it was made public. Fritz Peterson and Susanne Kekich were married in 1974 and remained so. She survives him. Complete informatio­n on survivors was not immediatel­y available.

Fritz Peterson was born Fred Ingels Peterson in Chicago on Feb. 8, 1942, the eldest of three children of Fred and Annette (Ingels) Peterson. His father was a switchboar­d installer for the local phone company; his mother oversaw the household.

The family lived for a time in Crystal Lake, Ill., northwest of Chicago, and Fred went to high school in Arlington Heights, Ill., where he played hockey as well as baseball. He attended Northern Illinois University, where he starred as a pitcher, and earned a bachelor’s degree in 1965, two years after signing with the Yankees and playing the first of three minor league seasons.

On April 15, 1966, in his big league debut, Mr. Peterson pitched the Yankees to their first victory of the season, beating the Baltimore Orioles.

He went 12-11 in his rookie year for a team whose woeful record was 70-89-1. The next offseason, 1972-73, as the Peterson and Kekich marriages intertwine­d, Mr. Peterson worked as a radio commentato­r for the New York Raiders of the shortlived World Hockey Associatio­n.

 ?? MARTY LEDERHANDL­ER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mr. Peterson (front) and Mike Kekich sat on a schooner’s bowsprit with their wives, Marilyn Peterson (left) and Susanne Kekich, in 1972 on Long Island Sound in New York.
MARTY LEDERHANDL­ER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Mr. Peterson (front) and Mike Kekich sat on a schooner’s bowsprit with their wives, Marilyn Peterson (left) and Susanne Kekich, in 1972 on Long Island Sound in New York.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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