Memoirs Jim Bouton wrote about Pepitone in his 1970 book
Ball Four. Bouton said that Pepitone went nowhere without a bag containing hair products for his rapidly balding head and that he took to wearing
toupees. In January 1975, Pepitone published his own tell-all baseball memoir, titled
Joe, You Coulda Made Us Proud. The book received substantial attention for its many revelations, particularly about his abusive father and his self-lacerating candor about his self-destructive ways. Later that year, he posed nude for
Foxy Lady magazine, featuring full frontal nudity.
Professional softball career The American Professional Slo-Pitch League (APSPL) was the first of several
men's professional slow-pitch softball leagues formed in the United States during the late 1970s and early 1980s. It built on the growth and talent in the booming men's amateur game during this period. Pepitone joined the
Trenton Statesmen of the APSPL, and put up respectable numbers in 1978 (110–225, .489, 14 HRs, 61 RBIs) and 1979 (50–122, .410, 9 HRs, 30 RBIs). The
Detroit Caesars offered $30,000 to the Statesmen to buy Pepitone's contract in 1978. That offer was rejected. After the Trenton franchise disbanded in 1979, Pepitone became the team president and first baseman for
Chicago Nationwide Advertising of the North American Softball League (NASL) during their 1980 season. Pepitone was suspended for six games by NASL Commissioner Robert Brown for "conduct detrimental to professional softball" and was out for the season in August with a thigh injury. The Yankees then hired him as a minor league hitting instructor at the end of the NASL season, bringing his professional softball career to a close.
MLB coaching In October 1980, Pepitone was hired as a minor league hitting coach with the Yankees He was replaced by
Lou Pinella in August of that summer. After Pepitone was sent to prison, Yankee owner
George Steinbrenner re-hired him in 1988 as part of a
work-release program to serve in the development of minor league players. Pepitone received a 1999
World Series ring for his relationship with the Yankees. He subsequently sold that ring at auction. ==Personal life==