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Orlando Cepeda
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Note: A letter has been
sent on April 25, 2008 to this athlete to provide their contact and
charity information. Once we receive their response, their
information will be entered below. This has been done to
ensure that the information is correct and to protect the athlete's
privacy in case they do not want their information to be posted on
the Internet. |
Contact Information (where autograph
requests should be mailed to):
Contact Person and/or Name of
Organization _____________________________________________
Address:
__________________________________________________________________________
State: _________ City:
__________________________ Zip Code: ________________
Charity
Information:
Name of charity or charities
the donations go to __________________________________________
Signing Habits:
1) If you sign items for free,
what are the maximum number of items you will sign for free? ___________
2) Do you answer questions
sent by fans? ______________
3) Do you prefer when fans
send you their own pens/markers? ______________
4) What can fans do to make it
easier for you to sign their items?
__________________________________________________________________
Donation Charges:
| Item |
Price |
Item |
Price |
| Cards |
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Flats up to 8x10 |
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| Flats up to 16x20 |
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Baseballs/small
footballs |
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| Magazines |
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Flats larger than 16x20 |
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| Mini Helmets |
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Football/Basketball |
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| Large Helmet |
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Bats |
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| Jerseys |
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Inscriptions |
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| Other _________ |
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Other _________ |
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Who should the check/money
order be made out to: __________________________________________
Payment can be made by: Cash,
Personal Checks, Money Orders, Cashier’s Checks
Orlando Cepeda's
Message to the Fans
Biography
Orlando Manuel Cepeda Pennes (born September
17, 1937 in Ponce, Puerto Rico) is a former 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 Cha-cha.
****
First baseman / Designated hitter
Born: September 17, 1937 (1937-09-17) (age 70)
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 15, 1958
for the San Francisco Giants
Final game
September 19, 1974
for the Kansas City Royals
Career statistics
Batting average .297
Home runs 379
RBI 1,365
Teams
San Francisco Giants (1958–1966)
St. Louis Cardinals (1966–1968)
Atlanta Braves (1969–1972)
Oakland Athletics (1972)
Boston Red Sox (1973)
Kansas City Royals (1974)
Career highlights and awards
All-Star (AL): 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1967
Most Valuable Player: 1967
World Series champion: 1967, 1972
Rookie of the Year: 1958
Led NL in Doubles (38) in 1958
Led NL in Sacrifice Flies in 1958 (9) and 1966 (9)
Led NL in Home Runs (46) and At Bats per Home Run (12.7) in 1961
Led NL in RBI in 1961 (142) and 1967 (111)
Member of the National
Baseball Hall of Fame
Elected 1999
Election Method Veteran's Committee
****
Biography
Baseball career
In his first season in 1958, Cepeda batted .312 with 25 home runs and 96 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 having a
league-leading 111 RBIs. He was the second NL player (joining fellow Giant Carl
Hubbell in 1936) to win the MVP unanimously (receiving all first-place votes).
Also, he is the only player in baseball history to win Rookie of the Year and
Most Valuable Player awards unanimously. He was the first Latin player to win
the home run and RBI titles.
Cepeda was a seven-time All-Star (1959–64, 1967). He was the first Puerto Rican
to start in an All Star Game (1959). Also he is the only Puerto Rican to be
selected in two position for the All Star Game; as a first basemen and left
fielder.
The "Baby Bull" is one of seven players with more home runs in their first seven
seasons than Hank Aaron: Albert Pujols (282), Eddie Mathews (253), Frank
Robinson (241), Ernie Banks (228), Ted Williams (222), Orlando Cepeda (222),
Mark McGwire (220) and Hank Aaron (219).
Also, he is one of eleven players who batted .300+ with 30+ homers in four
consecutive seasons. The others are Babe Ruth, Hack Wilson, Lou Gehrig, Chuck
Klein, Jimmie Foxx, Joe DiMaggio, Hank Greenberg, Mickey Mantle, Ted Kluszewski,
and Albert Pujols.
He retired in 1975 with a career .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. He was the first to win the Designated Hitter of the
Year Award (1973).
Cepeda is one of the most complete batters born in Puerto Rico. He batted for
average, power, and was a great RBI man. He is the only Puerto Rican that in his
first ten years of organized baseball, reached .300+ nine times, and in the year
he missed, batted .297. In addition, he is the only Puerto Rican player to win a
triple crown in organized baseball. In 1956, while playing with the St. Cloud
Rox, a Class "C" minor league club in the Northern League (baseball), he was
leader in batting (.355), home runs (26) and RBI (112).
His lifetime numbers in the Puerto Rico Baseball League are .325 batting average
(fifth place), 89 home runs, 340 runs batted in and .544 slugging (second place
and only Puerto Rican with .500+). He batted .300+ eleven times, most in
league's history.
Retirement and drug problems
In 1975, after retirement, Cepeda was arrested 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 the rest on
probation.
Induction to Hall of Fame
This drug-related episode and conviction caused Cepeda to have difficulty
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 committed crimes
equal to or worse than attempted drug smuggling and were still inducted. Some
international celebrities and former teammates also joined in the campaign. In
1994, his last year of eligibility by voting, he came within two votes of being
elected.
Finally, in 1999, he was elected by the Hall's Veterans Committee, joining
Roberto Clemente as the only other Puerto Rican in Cooperstown.
Cepeda belongs to twelve hall of fame, most by any Puerto Rican athlete:
1. San Francisco Bay (1990) 2. Puerto Rico Baseball Hall of Fame(1991) 3.
Latinoamerican Sports, Laredo(1995) 4. Santurce Hall of Fame (1997) 5. Puerto
Rico Sports Hall of Fame(1993) 6. Baseball Hall of Fame, Cooperstown(1999) 7.
Missouri Hall of Fame (2000) 8. Guayama Hall of Fame (2000) 9. Ponce Hall of
Fame (2001) 10. Cataño Hall of Fame (2002) 11. Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame
(2002) 12. African American Ethnic Sports Hall of Fame (2007)
Also, in 2006, the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR), approved a
chapter for Puerto Rico, the first in Latin America, and it is named after him.
Humanitarian and additional sports recognitions
Cepeda has been 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.
In 2001, he won the Ernie Banks Positive Image Lifetime Achievement Award. The
citation for the award reads, in part, "The legacy he is leaving is an
impressive one indeed. His commitment to community service includes credentials
for a Humanitarian Hall of Fame. He is now recognized nationally for his
humanitarian efforts as an ambassador for baseball and the San Francisco
Giants." It goes on to list many of his national and community contributions,
including his regular visits to inner-city schools throughout the country in
conjunction with HOPE: Helping Other People Excel. "Each December, Orlando tours
as part of the Giants Christmas Caravan visiting hospitals, schools and youth
groups including the UC San Francisco Medical Center pediatric cancer ward. He
is a participant in Athletes Against AIDS. He is also a public speaker for the
Omega Boys and Girls Club, counseling at-risk children in the community."[1]
The Giants retired Orlando Cepeda's number 30. It hangs on the facing of the
upper deck in the left field corner of AT&T Park. Cepeda is currently working in
the Giants front office.
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.
Cepeda is a Buddhist and Sōka Gakkai International (SGI-USA) member. Cepeda
shared his experience at an SGI-USA meeting: "I had to fight every day," said
Cepeda, explaining how he endured growing up in his native Puerto Rico. "But
when I joined the SGI-USA, I learned that peace comes from inside. From my
Buddhist practice, I have learned how to be a person who cares about others."
Recent drug possession charges
On May 2, 2007 in Solano County, Cepeda was booked into jail after a routine
traffic stop on Interstate 80. 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.[2]
Cepeda has said through his attorney that the drugs weren't his and that they
belonged to his wife with diabetes that had a prescription to use marijuana for
medical purposes.[3]
Quotes
"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)
"I've always regarded Orlando as the greatest right-handed true power hitter I
ever saw in our day." - Willie McCovey
"He was a great player. He is, I know, remembered most for his bat, but he was a
damned good glove man, had a solid arm and ran the bases intelligently." - Jim
Davenport
"This is the best right-handed pure power hitter for a young player I´ve ever
seen*" - Bill Rigney (1958)
Books by and about Orlando Cepeda
My Ups and Downs in Baseball by Orlando Cepeda with Charles Einstein. Putnam
(1968; 2000).
High and Inside: Orlando Cepeda's Story by Orlando Cepeda with Mary Kelly.
Hardwood Press (1984).
Baby Bull: From Hardball to Hard Time and Back by Orlando Cepeda with Herb Fagen.
Taylor Trade Publishing (1998).
The Orlando Cepeda Story by Bruce Markusen. Pinata Books (2001).
****
References
1^ Ernie Banks Positive Image Lifetime Achievement Award (2001). Retrieved on
2007-10-27.
2^ Bob Bensch (2007). Baseball's Hall-of-Famer Cepeda Arrested for Drugs.
Retrieved on 2007-05-02.
3^ Noel Algarín (2007). Asegura la droga es de un pariente y es legal. Retrieved
on 2007-05-03.
****
Source: Wikipedia.org at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orlando_Cepeda
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