It took a
Hoboken girl to
strike out
Little League's ban
Game was
opened to females when they took away her uniform in 1972
BY PHILIP
READ, Star-Ledger Staff, Friday, May 06, 2005
In the annals of baseball
history, pioneers are rare.
Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball.
Curt Flood opened the door to free agency and its eye-popping salaries.
And Maria Pepe shattered the gender barrier in Little League.
For three games in 1972, Pepe -- then a 12-year-old with a deep passion
for the game and a mean fastball -- donned the colors of the Hoboken
"Young Democrats" and stepped out of the dugout in the so-called
"Birthplace of Baseball."
Then it was over.
"I think the hardest part was when they took my uniform away," Pepe said
yesterday, her voice breaking as she recalled that dark moment in her
Hoboken childhood. "I didn't feel I was doing anything harmful."
Her Little League career didn't last long, but it propelled a "shy kid"
into the national limelight and forever changed the role of girls in the
national pastime.
"They would ask me, 'Why do you want to play baseball?' I still
remember the headlines, 'Maria Pepe kicked off team.'"
Thirty-two years and five million female Little Leaguers later, Pepe
told her pioneering story yesterday to a room full of Montclair
seventh-graders at the Yogi Berra Museum & Learning Center on the campus
of Montclair State University.
"Part of my healing," she said of one of her rare public appearances.
In 1972, there were no girls softball teams. Pepe's friends told
their Little League coach, Jimmy Farina, that there was a girl who could
not only pitch, but hit and field, too.
"He said, 'Why aren't you signing up?'" she remembered. "'Because
I'm a girl,'" was the response. "He said, 'Can you play?'"
Play she could, beating out a crop of boys and securing a spot as a
starting pitcher and left fielder.
Soon, the letter came from the Little League's national headquarters,
threatening to revoke the team's charter for breaking the league's ban
on girls. After getting the news from the coach, Pepe turned in
her uniform. The case attracted national attention and the Yankees
honored her and her family with a special day at Yankee Stadium.
It also attracted some unwelcome attention.
She told of riding in an elevator in the 10-story Hoboken apartment
building her family lived in when she was confronted by a "gentleman"
with an opinion. "He was really yelling at me in the elevator,
'You're causing all this trouble in town,'" she recalled. "I'd
never tell anybody."
Soon, the National Organization for Women approached her family
about championing her cause, and they agreed. It would take two
years -- by then Pepe was too old for Little League -- but the courts
sided with her.
"The institution of Little League is as American as the hot dog and
apple pie," Sylvia Pressler, then a hearing examiner for the state
Division of Civil Rights, said in her ruling. "There is no reason
that part of Americana should be withheld from girls." The ruling
was later upheld in Superior Court, and the dugout gates were opened.
Her brief Little League career was enough to make ESPN's Top 10 list of
the greatest moments in U.S. women's sports history, coming in at No. 5.
Pepe said she's come "full circle," attending last year's Little League
World Series in Williamsport, Pa. There, she got to meet Creighton
Hale, who as president of the Little League had appeared in court to
oppose girls playing in the league.
"When he shook my hand, he said, 'I just wanted to say my granddaughter
plays.' ... It was very heart-warming."
Yesterday, she was like a kid again, briefly getting to meet the
museum's namesake, Yankees great Yogi Berra, and snapping a picture of
her "YD" uniform-clad self in the museum's "Jersey Girls" display, as
well as the field at the adjoining stadium. "It brings back a lot
of memories." She proudly notes she still has all her old baseball
cards.
After Little League, Pepe went on to play basketball and softball in
high school and varsity baseball at St. Peter's College in Jersey City.
Today, at 45, she still calls Hoboken home and is a CPA and controller
at Hackensack University Medical Center. She occasionally plays in
company games pitting managers against administrators, sometimes batting
against hospital CEO John Ferguson.
"I did get a good hit off of him," she said.
She doesn't discount the coming of a day when there will be a
professional women's baseball league. "Hopefully I'll be young
enough I can play."
Yet Pepe, who said she tends to be quiet and sentimental about her
story, clearly enjoyed speaking with the seventh-graders from
Montclair's Renaissance School. She, too, opened the eyes of some
of the girls who today are doing what she was forbidden to do.
"It inspires me to keep going on with baseball," said Maggie Regan, a
13-year-old who plays second base with the Renaissance Raptors.
It also got Ava Kravitz thinking.
"I want to know if there's a Montclair baseball girls league," said the
12-year-old first baseman for The Sparks. "I think it's only
softball."
As for Pepe, even today she wouldn't necessarily be a good fit for
softball.
"I could never windmill pitch. I just never could get that
rhythm."
Philip Read covers West Essex. He may be reached
at pread@starledger.com or (973) 392-1851.
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