News

Not until Pete Rose was a corpse would his 4,256 hits – more than any big-leaguer in history – and 24 years of singular ...
Pete Rose and "Shoeless" Joe Jackson are now both eligible for baseball's Hall of Fame after their careers were tarnished by ...
People make mistakes, sometimes grave mistakes. Certainly, Pete made more than his share. Baseball fans across America are ...
For Aaron Boone, it was personal. He grew up around Pete Rose; he wasn’t just baseball’s Hit King, he was his father’s ...
"In some ways, he was ahead of his time, or the game. That’s how I choose to remember him." – Terry Francona on Pete Rose's ...
After decades of controversy and exclusion, Major League Baseball has lifted Pete Rose’s lifetime ban, opening the Hall of ...
Pete Rose, 'Shoeless' Joe Jackson and 14 others were posthumously removed from MLB's ineligible list, making Hall of Fame ...
MLB's all-time Hit King removed from ineligible list in a stunning turn in one of sport’s longest-running dramas.
The all-time hit king and Jackson -- both longtime baseball pariahs stained by gambling, seen by MLB as the game's mortal sin ...
Happy Felsch, a Milwaukee baseball legend in the early 1900s and part of the "Black Sox" scandal, was reinstated to MLB ...
SEATTLE — As someone who grew up around Pete Rose, Aaron Boone was happy on Tuesday.
Pete Rose is now eligible for the Hall of Fame, and John Condit, the last person to interview MLB's hit king, may have President Donald Trump to thank.