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Joe DePugh, Speedball Pitcher in Springsteen's ‘Glory Days,' Dies at 75

Joe DePugh, Speedball Pitcher in Springsteen's ‘Glory Days,' Dies at 75

New York Times02-04-2025
Joe DePugh, the Little League teammate of Bruce Springsteen who inspired that rocker's hit song 'Glory Days,' a rousing, bittersweet anthem to their hardscrabble childhoods in Freehold, N.J., where time passed by 'in the wink of a young girl's eye,' died on Friday in West Palm Beach, Fla. He was 75.
The cause of death, in a hospice facility, was metastatic prostate cancer, his brother Paul said.
In the early 1960s, before Mr. Springsteen became the Boss, he was a clumsy baseball player whose athletic abilities were so sad that Joe, the team's star pitcher, gave him the nickname Saddie.
'Bruce lost this big game for us one year,' Mr. DePugh told The Palm Beach Post in 2011. 'We stuck him out in right field all the time, where you think he's out of harm's way. But this important game, we had a bunch of guys missing, and we had to play him.'
In the last inning, Saddie dropped an easy fly ball.
'Actually, it hit him on the head,' Mr. DePugh said, 'and we lost the game.'
They remained friends in high school, bonding over their turbulent home lives and their distant, alcoholic fathers. After graduation, Saddie took off to play rock 'n' roll in bars and nightclubs. Joe, who excelled at multiple sports, tried out for the Los Angeles Dodgers but wound up playing basketball at King's College in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
In 1973, when they had been out of touch for years, these two boyhood friends bumped into each other at the Headliner, a roadside bar in Neptune, near the Jersey Shore. Mr. Springsteen was walking in; Mr. DePugh was walking out.
'We were 24 years old, and he was just hitting it big in the music industry,' Mr. DePugh told the Wilkes-Barre newspaper The Times Leader in 2011. 'We went back in and started talking about grade school, the nuns we had, Little League and high school.'
Afterward, they drifted apart again: Mr. Springsteen, to worldwide fame; Mr. DePugh, to a vagabond life as a contractor, splitting his time between South Florida and Stowe, Vt.
'He was a rolling stone,' Mr. DePugh's brother said. 'He didn't really live anywhere for any length of time.'
Wherever he went, Mr. DePugh told stories of his friendship with Mr. Springsteen and the night they reunited at the bar. In 1984, the Boss released 'Born in the U.S.A.,' his seventh album. The fourth song on Side 2 was 'Glory Days.'
Scott Wright, a friend of Mr. DePugh's in Vermont, heard it on the radio.
'He told me, 'Springsteen has a new album out, and there's a song on there about you,'' Mr. DePugh told The New York Times in 2011. ''It's exactly the story you told me.''
Mr. DePugh didn't believe him, so Mr. Wright called the radio station and requested the song. Half an hour later, the D.J. came on and said, 'This is going out to Scotty Wright up in Stowe, Vermont,' Mr. DePugh recalled on the public radio show 'Only a Game' in 2011. 'This is the new Springsteen song, 'Glory Days,' and apparently it's about a friend of Scott's.'
A guitar strummed. Then Saddie sang:
Mr. DePugh was floored.
'I knew immediately it was about me,' he told The Times Leader. 'It described exactly what happened that night.'
Mr. DePugh was like a lot of characters in Mr. Springsteen's songs: wounded by loss and disappointments, but also resolute, and certainly never hopeless.
Joseph Francis DePugh was born on Aug. 8, 1949, in Yonkers N.Y., the eldest of five boys. His father, Joseph, was frequently absent. His mother, Joan (Campbell) DePugh, a typist and clerk for the state of New Jersey, died of cancer in 1969.
'We didn't have much, but, like Bruce, we had enough,' Paul DePugh said in an interview. 'We always had a roof over our heads. But after my mother died, everything went to hell.'
Joe became the legal guardian of his younger brothers, who were shuffled between foster homes.
He went on to graduate from King's College with a degree in English and worked as a substitute teacher before starting a contracting company. He made a good enough living as a contractor to shuttle back and forth between Florida and Vermont. His marriage to Nancy Saunders in 1987 ended in divorce.
For years, there was debate among his Freehold buddies about who the real 'speedball pitcher' in the song was, but Mr. DePugh always insisted it was him. In 2004, Mr. Springsteen gave Mr. DePugh and other friends in Freehold tickets to a concert at Giants Stadium in the Meadowlands.
'Before he sang 'Glory Days,'' Mr. DePugh told The Times Leader, 'Bruce yelled into the microphone, 'Joe D., are you out there?''
The following year, their mutual friend Don Norkus got them together for lunch at an Italian restaurant in Red Bank, N.J.
'Bruce pulls in and I point at him and he points at me, and that's when the hugging started,' Mr. DePugh told The New York Times. They reconnected again a few years later at a restaurant in Freehold.
'He said, 'Always remember, I love you,' not like some corny Budweiser commercial, but a real sentimental thing,' Mr. DePugh said. 'I was dumbfounded. I said, 'Thanks, Saddie.''
Last week, after Mr. DePugh died, Saddie posted a statement on his website.
'Just a moment to mark the passing of Freehold native and ballplayer Joe DePugh,' it said. 'He was a good friend when I needed one. 'He could throw that speedball by you, make you look like a fool.'…Glory Days my friend.'
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Airport mobs, hill sliding and selfies: Little League Classic creates memories for youngsters and big leaguers alike
Airport mobs, hill sliding and selfies: Little League Classic creates memories for youngsters and big leaguers alike

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Airport mobs, hill sliding and selfies: Little League Classic creates memories for youngsters and big leaguers alike

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Andy Audette was in pure disbelief. Earlier this summer, Audette could tell that his son Colton's Little League team was a pretty talented bunch. But even as the wins kept piling up, qualifying for the Little League World Series felt like a far-off fantasy. Fast forward to mid-August, and that fantasy has become reality. The Audettes are here in Williamsport, Pa., the epicenter of the youth baseball universe. It is the final stop on what has been a magical month-long journey for a tight-knit group of a dozen 12-year-olds from Bonney Lake, Washington. And the reward for being one of 20 lucky teams from around the globe to qualify for this renowned tournament was not just the opportunity to live out every young ballplayer's dream, but something more. As fate would have it, the Little League team from about 40 miles south of Seattle made it to Williamsport in the same year that the Mariners were making their debut at the Little League Classic, MLB's annual showcase event held in cooperation with the opening weekend of the Little League World Series. 'The kids are what this game is all about,' said Mariners manager Dan Wilson, who was back in Williamsport for the first time since his Illinois team reached the Little League World Series in 1981. 'When we arrived, seeing the team from the Northwest there and their reaction when we got off the bus, and the swarm of all of our guys,' said Wilson, who was one of several team personnel and Mariners staff members wearing official Little League apparel representing the Bonney Lake team. 'When you see it through that 12-year-old's eyes, it's pretty special.' [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Colton is one of those 12-year-olds. Nicknamed Little Dumper, a nod to the Mariners' MVP candidate catcher Cal Raleigh's magnificent Big Dumper moniker, Colton had become a tournament favorite during Bonney Lake's run. Once the Audettes realized that an encounter with the star catcher could be in the cards on Sunday, preparations were made: Custom t-shirts with 'Lil Dumper' emblazoned on a drawing of a dump truck and Audette's No. 22 — one for Colton to wear to greet Cal, and one to give to Cal as a gift. It wasn't that long ago that Andy and fellow coaches Scott Seibert and Chris Heacox were just hoping they could lead their boys to a state championship. Now here they were, seated behind home plate during Mariners batting practice, watching Raleigh swing away while wearing his brand new 'Lil Dumper' shirt. A few hours later, they watched Raleigh send a soaring fly ball just over the left field wall for his MLB-leading 47th home run. 'It's just been unbelievable — a dream,' said the elder Audette, still shaking his head in awe as he watched Colton gawk at the big leaguers alongside his teammates. 'When I went to bed last night — I haven't slept well at all — I'm walking around at 3 in the morning, I go down to the field, and I sit there and just look up like, what is this?" 'And I'm just visualizing what today might look like. And this is exactly what I envisioned.' For as special as the Audettes' experience turned out to be, they are hardly alone in their wonder from the day's events. The eighth edition of the Little League Classic provided another generation of Little League teams and thousands of lucky fans in attendance at the iconic complex in Williamsport a collection of new, vivid memories that will sustain for a lifetime. It was a little over two weeks ago that MLB set a new all-time record for single-game regular season attendance when over 90,000 fans filled a massive racetrack in Bristol, Tenn. to watch the Reds and Braves in the Speedway Classic. It is here in Williamsport, however, that MLB has built a refreshing tradition that achieves something completely different. Rather than a gigantic spectacle a la Speedway, the Little League Classic annually features the smallest annual attendance of the season by a comfortable margin. Delicately tucked in between the Lycoming Creek, which runs north from the Susquehanna River, and a standard neighborhood park featuring a public pool and a couple basketball courts, Journey Bank Ballpark at Historic Bowman Field has a capacity of about 2,500. It's a staggeringly small total to host a major-league game. For reference, the two minor-league parks currently housing major-league teams in Sacramento and Tampa hold about 10-12,000 fans, while the smallest capacity major-league stadium, Cleveland's Progressive Field, maxes out around 35,000. And with so few seats available for this unique event, MLB ensures the bulk of the crowd is made up of the Little League players, coaches, and families who get to take a break from their own high-stakes competition to enjoy an unrivaled up-close look at some of their favorite big leaguers. This year's contest featured the Mariners and Mets, a marquee matchup between two teams jockeying for playoff position in their respective leagues. The teams had split the first two games of the series at Citi Field before taking the quick flight west on Sunday morning for the finale in Williamsport. Entering the weekend, Seattle was one of baseball's hottest teams while New York had been scuffling hard, but this series brought a reversal of fortunes. After Seattle won an 11-9 slugfest on Friday night, the Mets bounced back with a 3-1 win on Saturday behind a strong start from top prospect Nolan McLean in his MLB debut. And on Sunday night at Bowman Field, the Mets cruised to a 7-3 victory to clinch their first series win of the month. Starter Clay Holmes pitched well for New York in what was, remarkably, his third appearance in a Little League Classic, following relief outings in the event with the Pirates in 2019 and the Yankees a year ago. Juan Soto drew three walks and delivered his signature shuffle to the delight of the crowd. Mark Vientos blasted a three-run homer to break the game open in the fifth inning. Raleigh's two-run blast was a memorable moment, but not enough to fuel a full-fledged Seattle comeback. But the truth is, the game that transpires on Sunday night is merely an epilogue to everything that unfolds over the course of the day leading up to first pitch. From the arrivals at Williamsport Regional Airport in the morning featuring Little Leaguers greeting the major leaguers on the tarmac to several hours of beautiful chaos at the complex, it's a nonstop free-for-all of autograph signings, selfies, and frantic chants from young kids from all over the world trying to get their favorite players' attention. Big league stars roam the concourses, slide down the famous hill that looms over Howard J. Lamade Stadium, and talk shop with the kids who hope to be in their shoes some day while spectating the games in progress. For the most part, it's a mess, in the best way possible, with a constant flow of players moving around the complex, attracting varying degrees of magnetic pull of a larger crowd, depending on their star power. 'I heard this rustling behind me,' said Mariners general manager Justin Hollander. 'I saw like, 70 people in a circle, and I thought, 'oh, Cal must be here.'" Multi-time All-Stars get mobbed, middle relievers wander unbothered. Amidst all the madness, some interactions carry more weight than others. Bonney Lake linking up with the nearby Mariners is surely special, but the most powerful connections are those made between the major-leaguers with international roots connecting with their native country's teams in Williamsport. Ontario's Matt Brash and Josh Naylor hanging out with Team Canada. Francisco Lindor and Edwin Diaz sitting in the stands with Team Puerto Rico. Andres Munoz and Randy Arozarena giving a pep talk to Team Mexico. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza spending time with the team that made it to Williamsport from his hometown of Barquisimeto, Venezuela, with his fellow Venezuelan players Francisco Alvarez and Luis Torrens close by to share their own words of wisdom. "Watching the kids staring at Francisco Alvarez or Francisco Lindor, and you just see that smile on their face, like, 'oh my god, this is Francisco Alvarez,' or 'this is Francisco Lindor!'' said Mendoza. 'And it just kind of takes you back to when I was that age and being around professional players, even from a distance ... and just the fact that they were able to be that close, it was a pretty cool experience.' For tens of thousands of young ballplayers around the world, reaching the Little League World Series is the ultimate dream, with just a couple hundred lucky enough to earn a berth in the renowned summer tournament. For a few dozen major-leaguers, this brief trip to Williamsport represents something different amidst the unrelenting grind of a 162-game season, a welcome detour from the dog days of summer. It's undeniably a long day at the office for the big leaguers — virtually never do teams fly in and out of cities on game days like they do for the Little League Classic, let alone all the unusual and exhausting activity at the complex that takes place before preparing for their own game — but it serves a greater purpose that is not lost on the players, win or lose on Sunday night. 'It's worth it,' said Mariners outfielder Julio Rodriguez. 'If we don't impact the youth and the people around us in a positive way, we're doing this for nothing. And that's how I see it.' 'Even though it's more work, I think it's worth it.'

In Williamsport, the Mets find connection and confidence
In Williamsport, the Mets find connection and confidence

New York Times

time5 hours ago

  • New York Times

In Williamsport, the Mets find connection and confidence

WILLIAMSPORT, Penns. — The town's unofficial motto adorns a hat in the team store at Bowman Park. It all begins in Billtown. Birthplace of Little League baseball, epicenter of the youth sports world each August. For 20 Little League teams, an unforgettable summer journey ends in Williamsport. For the Mets on Sunday, their hopes of a late-season sprint into an unforgettable autumn start here. Advertisement Sunday was a chance to recalibrate for New York — to change the mood from a wretched recent stretch of baseball by changing the environs. So pay a kid $10 to park in their yard, wrap a plastic patio chair around your back and tuck the sturdiest piece of cardboard you own under your arm. You'll hear a dozen languages, just as many accents and shouts for autographs and selfies around every turn. You'll wait in line for ice cream behind kids from Aruba, Tokyo and Fairfield — all of whom will get the same flavor. Let's change it up. No part of a day filled with planned interaction feels more choreographed than the way it opens. The Mets' team plane landed at Williamsport Regional Airport just ahead of 10:30 a.m. after a 35-minute flight. Once it taxied and the engines were shut down, a trio of buses toting Little League teams from Las Vegas and Venezuela pulled up to form a welcoming line. Yet genuine moments can spring from that design. As Carlos Mendoza worked his way down the line, he spotted the orange uniforms of the Venezuelan squad, the one in Monday's international quarterfinals. 'Barquisimeto?' he asks, his face lighting up. He'd learned that morning that the team was from his hometown. And so Mendoza spent a little extra time in the line coming off the plane and a lot more later at Volunteer Stadium in the stands, finding common ground with another generation. 'It was really cool just to talk to some of the coaches and kids, asking what part of town they're from, sharing my experiences – 'Oh, I used to play on that Little League field,'' Mendoza said. 'It just brings you back so many memories when you were that age.' Sitting in the stands while Canada mercy-ruled Australia, Mendoza was reminded of what those games sounded like as a kid. 'Just the joy even from the stands,' he said. 'Especially where I'm from, it's pretty intense. It's loud, we've got trumpets, we've got drums, mom is singing. Just listening around the kids and the atmosphere, it took me back. Way back.' Advertisement The Little Leaguers did well to return the favor, peppering the major-league game that night with chants for specific players — and not always the ones at bat. Sitting right behind the Mets dugout, the Venezuelan team led the way. 'It took me back to where everything started,' said Francisco Lindor, who had three more hits in the game. 'It took me back to why I play the game.' The hill is four flights of steps from concourse level, which is itself raised above the field. What looks simple enough on TV grows in your mind as you ascend those steps and as a kid excitedly hands you a slab of cardboard with grass stains on one side. 'When I got to the top and looked down,' Tyrone Taylor said, 'I was like 'Ooh.'' 'I faced my fears today,' said Mark Vientos, who may have required a push to start down. 'That was a childhood dream of mine to go down that hill. But I was nervous.' 'I was a little nervous at first,' said Sean Manaea, 'but once I started going down, I felt like a kid again.' You could even pinpoint the moment Manaea could let go, when he stopped gripping the sides of a cardboard car and raised his arms gleefully. How did Mendoza feel about his players, including a starter who'd missed three months, sliding down a hill? 'Mixed feelings,' the manager laughed. 'They're being who they are and just having fun with the kids and interacting and going through the whole experience.' 'Maybe I probably shouldn't have done that,' Manaea said. 'But when in Rome, I guess.' Few Mets embraced the festivities as much as the left-handed pitcher. Informed en route of the practice of pin trading, he decided he'd spend the day amassing as many pins as possible. They donned his royal blue jersey as he fist-bumped the kids from Honolulu during their introductions, and he proudly pulled out a small sandwich bag — '#59' in marker on top, like the ones that used to hold your lunch money — with at least 10 in there. Advertisement 'I got Dugout,' he said earnestly of the Little League World Series' mascot, 'which is pretty cool.' Even after 4 p.m., he had his eyes out for more. When he was introduced along the first-base line, he wore those pins around his neck. 'I saw this on TV as a kid and thought it would be a lot of fun to go to. It's the first time I saw kids on TV competing,' Manaea said. 'I'm finally here. I just soaked it all in.' The first Sunday at the Little League World Series is known, informally, as 'Stayin' Alive Sunday.' There are four games here, all in the losers' bracket of this double-elimination tournament, and so every loss ends a team's dream. Braintree, Massachusetts; Brisbane, Australia; Clarendon Hills, Illinois; and Arraijan, Panama all fell on Sunday. With seven days to go, the tournament is down to 12 teams. The stakes were not as immediate for the Mets, but they too are hoping to make a tournament of 12. Playing a home game 200 miles from home served them well: Their 7-3 win was one of their crisper games in weeks, and it clinched a series win for the first time in the last six tries. Their offensive approach, Lindor explained, derived some from conversations with Little Leaguers about keeping it simple. 'When we're going well,' said Vientos, whose three-run homer opened the lead up, 'it's very simple.' This can all be fun, Sunday reminded the Mets, especially when you win. The other motto of Williamsport, the official one? 'The will is in us.' 'When you have something that breaks up the day-to-day, it jolts you,' Manaea said. 'I find a lot of this stuff really fun, so I'm here for it.' Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Cal Raleigh signs bathroom item for fan, dons custom chest protector at Little League Classic
Cal Raleigh signs bathroom item for fan, dons custom chest protector at Little League Classic

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Cal Raleigh signs bathroom item for fan, dons custom chest protector at Little League Classic

Professional athletes get asked to sign a lot of items, but Mariners star Cal Raleigh — also known as 'Big Dumper' — may have signed one of the more strange things on Sunday in Williamsport, Pa. Among the balls and hats that little leaguers were trying to get Raleigh to sign ahead of the MLB Little League Classic, one person held out a toilet seat for the catcher to put his name on. Without hesitating, Raleigh signed the seat, much to the delight of the kids, who started to cheer as he did so, before continuing on with autographs on balls for the enthusiastic kids. Raleigh signed his name at the front of the seat. The entire exchange amused the Mariners catcher, who appeared to make a joke about the whole thing to an official who was standing with him. 3 Mariners star Cal Raleigh signs a toilet seat before the Little League Classic on Aug. 17. ESPN/X He also made waves in Williamsport thanks to the custom chest protector he wore behind the plate, which featured images of all his Mariners teammates when they were in Little League. The toilet seat was likely a nod to Raleigh's nickname, which stems from the fact that he has a large posterior. Raleigh has embraced the nickname, landing a very fitting endorsement deal with a with portable sanitation service company and paying homage to it with the custom bat he had for Players' Weekend. 3 Cal Raleigh of the Seattle Mariners looks on during batting practice before the MLB Little League Classic against the New York Mets at Bowman Field on August 17, 2025 Getty Images On one part of the bat, it read 'Big Dumper.' On another part of the barrel of the bat, it said: 'Big Butt … Bigger Bombs.' The words seem very appropriate considering the season that Raleigh has been having for Seattle. 3 Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh wears a custom chest protector featuring Little League photos of his teammates for Player's Weekend during the second inning of the Little League Classic baseball game against the New York Mets at Bowman Field in Williamsport, Pa. AP Raleigh earned his first career All-Star nod this season, while he's hit 47 home runs — which is the most in the majors and included one in the top of the seventh Sunday against the Mets — and 100 RBIs. The Mariners entered Sunday one game back of the AL West lead, but they had dropped three of their last four games.

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