MLB reinstates Pete Rose
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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.
The Cincinnati Reds will honor Pete Rose during Wednesday night's game with a later start time. Here's when they play.
Banned no more. Pete Rose, the Cincinnati native and Reds legend, has had his ban over baseball gambling lifted. What was his net worth when he died?
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.
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.
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Commissioner Rob Manfred’s landmark decision enables Rose and other players to finally be considered for Cooperstown, but it hardly makes any of them a shoo-in. Not even the Hit King.
Trump, per his style, has thoughts about all this, writing on Truth Social that "baseball, which is dying all over the place, should get off its fat, lazy ass, and elect Pete Rose, even though far too late, into the Baseball Hall of Fame!"
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,