Orlando Cepeda, Baseball Star Known as the Baby Bull, Dies at 86

Orlando Cepeda, the second Puerto Rican-born participant to be inducted into the Baseball Corridor of Fame and one of many main sluggers of his time, from the late Nineteen Fifties to the early ’70s, died on Friday. He was 86.

His dying was introduced by the San Francisco Giants. The group didn’t say the place he died.

Taking part in for 17 seasons within the main leagues, largely at first base but additionally within the outfield and, on the finish of his profession, as a delegated hitter, Cepeda hit 379 house runs, had 2,351 hits, drove in 1,365 runs and completed his profession with a batting common of .297.

He was a unanimous choice because the Nationwide League’s rookie of the yr with the Giants in 1958, their first season in San Francisco. He was additionally a unanimous alternative because the league’s most precious participant in 1967, the yr he helped lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a World Sequence championship. He hit not less than .300 in 9 seasons and performed in 9 All-Star Video games.

Cepeda’s father, Pedro, often called the Bull for his energy, was knowledgeable baseball participant, primarily a shortstop, who was usually referred to as the Babe Ruth of Puerto Rico. Orlando Cepeda, a muscular 6-foot-2, 210-pound right-handed energy hitter, grew to become often called the Child Bull.

Whereas pitching within the Giants’ farm system, Juan Marichal, the long run Corridor of Famer from the Dominican Republic, was impressed by Cepeda and his fellow Latino gamers on the Giants.

“I might see Orlando Cepeda, Felipe Alou and Ruben Gomez on tv,” Marichal as soon as advised The Related Press. “I began studying what the most important leagues had been all about, and I hoped that in the future I may very well be certainly one of them.”

Marichal, who joined the Giants in 1960, stated that Cepeda “was the kind of participant who had no concern, the kind of participant you needed enjoying behind you.”

However Cepeda’s status was tarnished a yr after his enjoying days ended.

He was arrested in San Juan in December 1975 for his position in smuggling marijuana from Colombia and spent 10 months in federal jail.

The Baseball Writers Affiliation of America, presumably taking his jail time period under consideration, rejected him for the Corridor of Fame in 15 years of balloting. It was not till 1999, and a vote by the Veterans Committee, that Cepeda made it to Cooperstown.

Cepeda had been revered in Puerto Rico almost as a lot as Roberto Clemente, the Pittsburgh Pirates proper fielder and the commonwealth’s first Hall of Famer, who died in a aircraft crash in 1972 whereas he was delivering earthquake reduction provides to Nicaragua.

Cepeda’s drug conviction stood in distinction with Clemente’s altruism and turned him into one thing of an outcast at house after his launch from jail.

“Whenever you play baseball you’ve got a reputation and cash and you are feeling such as you’re bulletproof,” Cepeda advised Sports activities Illustrated when he was about to enter the Corridor of Fame. “You neglect who you’re. Particularly in a Latin nation, they make you’re feeling like you’re God. I realized that one mistake, in two seconds, could make a catastrophe that appears to final ceaselessly.”

Orlando Cepeda was born in Ponce, P.R., on Sept. 17, 1937. His father, although a baseball hero in Puerto Rico and elsewhere within the Caribbean, was a sufferer of the most important leagues’ colour barrier. He died in 1955, simply earlier than his son performed his first recreation within the Giants’ farm system.

Cepeda was named rookie of the yr after hitting .312 with 25 house runs for the 1958 Giants. Three years later, he led the league in house runs, with 46, and runs batted in, with 142, as a part of a slugging lineup that additionally included Willie Mays, Willie McCovey and Felipe Alou.

Cepeda helped propel the Giants to their first pennant in San Francisco in 1962, however they had been overwhelmed by the Yankees within the World Sequence.

Affected by knee accidents, Cepeda was traded to the Cardinals early within the 1966 season for the pitcher Ray Sadecki. The following yr, he hit a career-high .325 and led the Nationwide League in runs batted in, with 111, in capturing M.V.P. honors. The Cardinals went on to defeat the Boston Pink Sox within the World Sequence.

Cepeda performed on the Cardinals’ pennant-winning 1968 group, and later with the Atlanta Braves, the Oakland Athletics and the Pink Sox. He retired in 1974, after a single season with the Kansas Metropolis Royals.

After transferring to Southern California within the mid-Nineteen Eighties, he embraced Buddhism whereas looking for a return to the baseball world. “From the second I stepped into the temple, it modified my life,” he advised The A.P. in 1993. “It taught me to just accept accountability for my actions, to not blame others.”

Cepeda returned to the San Francisco space in 1987. He scouted for the Giants in 1988 after which grew to become a member of their group relations division, talking to younger folks by the years about drug and alcohol abuse.

However bother arrived once more in Might 2007, when Cepeda was stopped for rushing in Solano County, north of San Francisco. The police reported discovering cocaine, marijuana and hypodermic syringes in his automotive. However he was allowed to plead no contest to a cost of possessing lower than one ounce of marijuana, and was fined $100.

The county district lawyer, David Paulson, fired the prosecutor dealing with the case hours earlier than the prosecutor was scheduled to resign, saying the choice to drop felony cocaine fees steered that Cepeda had acquired favorable remedy due to his celeb standing.

Cepeda, who lived in Harmony, Calif., held the title of group ambassador within the Big group at his dying. His survivors embody 5 sons, Hector, Orlando Jr., Carl, Malcolm and Ali.

The Giants retired Cepeda’s No. 30 at a ceremony at 3Com Park, previously Candlestick Park, in 1999, the yr he was inducted into the Baseball Corridor of Fame.Credit score…Susan Ragan/Related Press

For all of the years he was shunned in Puerto Rico, Cepeda gained redemption when he was elected to the Corridor of Fame. The Puerto Rican authorities introduced him again for a parade in his honor. It started on the San Juan airport, the place he had been arrested 24 years earlier, and handed by Outdated San Juan alongside streets lined by crowds.

The Giants retired Cepeda’s No. 30 two weeks earlier than his induction into the Corridor of Fame. In September 2008, they honored him with a bronze statue outdoors their stadium, AT&T Park (now Oracle Park). It stands alongside statues paying tribute to Mays, McCovey, Marichal and the pitcher Gaylord Perry.

In any case his travails, Cepeda was extraordinarily gratified.

“When issues like this occur to you,” he advised The San Francisco Chronicle on the unveiling of his statue, “that’s after I say to myself, ‘Orlando, you’re a really fortunate individual.’”

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