Pete Rose eligible for Baseball Hall of Fame
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The Cincinnati Reds are paying tribute to Pete Rose a day after baseball’s career hits leader was posthumously removed from the major leagues’ permanent ineligibility list.
The Cincinnati Reds will honor Pete Rose during Wednesday night's game with a later start time. Here's when they play.
The Cincinnati Reds have planned several events for Wednesday's game at Great American Ballpark, known as Pete Rose Night.
Pete Rose was reinstated by MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred on Tuesday, making him eligible for baseball’s Hall of Fame. Rose’s career was marked by gambling scandals and his permanent ban was lifted eight months after his death. The decision was met with pushback on social media, including from The Atlantic’s Norman Ornstein.
Tuesday's historic policy decision by MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred paved a way for Pete Rose, 'Shoeless' Joe Jackson, and others to enter the National Baseball Hall of Fame. And they could be doing so with a pair of St. Louis Cardinals legends.
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Buster Olney believes Pete Rose should be in baseball's Hall of Fame now that he's eligible, with his lifetime ban information noted on the plaque.
Obviously, we have to talk about Pete Rose. I’m Levi Weaver, here with Ken Rosenthal. Welcome to The Windup! More than 30 years after being placed on the league’s “permanently ineligible” list, and a little more than seven months after his death,
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Bauer, who was never found guilty of a crime, had some things to say after the news that Rose and the 1919 "Black Sox" had their lifetime bans lifted on Tuesday. Now playing in Japan, Bauer won the Na
The all-time hit king and Jackson -- both longtime baseball pariahs stained by gambling, seen by MLB as the game's mortal sin -- are now presumably eligible for election into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown.