Banned no more. The late Pete Rose, the Cincinnati native, Reds legend and all-time MLB hits leader who was banned from the sport over gambling accusations, is now eligible for the Hall of Fame. Rose, ...
Despite his acknowledged gambling, many believe Rose's on-field accomplishments warrant Hall of Fame recognition. Shoeless Joe Jackson, banned for his association with the 1919 Black Sox scandal, may ...
Major League Baseball has removed Pete Rose and other deceased players from MLB’s permanently ineligible list, an extraordinary twist to a saga that has gone on for more than three decades. The ...
— -- This is how it ends. Not with a line drive up the gap and a belly flop into second base. Not with the magical weekend in Cooperstown, New York, that once seemed so inevitable for the great ...
Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred recently made headlines by lifting the lifetime bans on 16 formerly banned players, including two of the most famous (or infamous) names in baseball ...
Major League Baseball has removed Pete Rose and other deceased players from MLB’s permanently ineligible list, an extraordinary twist to a saga that has gone on for more than three decades. The ...
Pete Rose was banned from the MLB for life in 1989 for betting on games as a manager and player, essentially dashing any hopes of him making it into the Hall of Fame. Now, his ban has been lifted.
John Condit was the last person to interview Pete Rose, doing so 10 days before his death for a documentary to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Rose breaking Ty Cobb's hit record. In that interview ...
Baseball fans are already calling for Pete Rose to enter the Hall of Fame after MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced he, alongside 16 deceased others, including "Shoeless" Joe Jackson, were taken ...
CINCINNATI — Pete Rose was celebrated by the Cincinnati Reds on May 14, a day after baseball’s career hits leader was posthumously removed from Major League Baseball’s permanent ineligibility list.
The park in Sedamsville already had been known as Pete Rose Park for nearly as long as Cincinnati’s first son of baseball had become a fixture in the Big Red Machine lineup. It’s where Rose’s father, ...