USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Late Yankees star was an enigma on and off the field

- Pete Caldera

Joe Pepitone had star quality and a powerful left-handed swing built to succeed at Yankee Stadium, along with a slick fielding reputation as a first baseman.

A three-time American League AllStar by age 24, Pepitone had a brashness that led to trouble, both within the game and away from the diamond. His baseball career is viewed in a what-mighthave-been way.

A Brooklyn native signed by the New York Yankees out of high school in 1958, Pepitone died March 13 at age 82.

In a statement, the Yankees remembered Pepitone for his “playful and charismati­c personalit­y and on-field contributi­ons” which “made him a favorite of generation­s of Yankees fans even beyond his years with the team in the 1960s.”

Pepitone broke in with the World Series champion 1962 Yankees at age 21 and became an establishe­d regular on the pennant-winning 1963 and 1964 Yankees, managed by Ralph Houk.

Along with colorful tales of Pepitone being the first MLB player to bring a hair dryer into a big-league clubhouse, or spending his entire signing bonus before he arrived at his first Yankees camp, were frictions with management and on-field incidents that marked his 12-year career.

After the 1969 season, Pepitone was traded by the Yankees to the Houston Astros for Curt Blefary.

Pepitone later played for Leo Durocher with the Chicago Cubs, and briefly with the Atlanta Braves. He had a mostly regrettabl­e 14-game stay in the Japan Central League.

In a 1985 incident, Pepitone was arrested and later jailed for four months on a narcotics charge. Ten years later, a DUI arrest in the Queens-Midtown Tunnel put Pepitone back in the headlines for the wrong reasons.

In a memoir, “Joe, You Coulda Made us Proud,” Pepitone chronicled his roughand-tumble childhood, which included verbal and physical abuse, and his hardpartyi­ng, New York nightlife and celebrity circles.

Early in the 1980s, Yankees owner George Steinbrenn­er hired Pepitone as a minor league coach.

His work included the defensive education of first baseman and future Yankees icon Don Mattingly.

Pepitone made it back in pinstripes for part of the 1982 season on the Yankees coaching staff.

“As a native New Yorker, he embraced everything about being a Yankee during both his playing career – which included three All-Star appearance­s and three Gold Gloves – and in the decades thereafter,” continued the Yankees statement.

“You always knew when Joe walked into a room – his immense pride in being a Yankee was always on display.

“He will be missed by our entire organizati­on, and we offer our deepest condolence­s to his family, friends and all who knew him.”

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AP Pepitone

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