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Rose, whose name has never been allowed to appear on a Hall of Fame ballot, died in September at age 83. In May, commissioner ...
This Date in Baseball, August 1 - Cal Ripken Jr. becomes the second major leaguer to play 2,000 straight games ...
1984 — Pete Rose of the Montreal Expos tied Ty Cobb on the career singles list, No. 3,052, with a base hit in the eighth ...
Baseball great Pete Rose is the subject of the new Max docuseries “Charlie Hustle & the Matter of Pete Rose,” writes Jonathan Abrams for The New ...
A sports agent who represented Pete Rose during the latter part of his life has petitioned a Nevada state court to confirm ...
The poll from Quinnipiac University, released June 27, found 60% of adults polled felt Rose should be in the Hall of Fame, ...
1982 — Philadelphia’s Pete Rose doubled off St. Louis pitcher John Stuper in the third inning to move into second place on the career hit list. Rose moved ahead of Hank Aaron with hit No. 3,772.
This Pete Rose, Manfred wrote, left baseball with no faith that he now has a "mature understanding" of what he did wrong. Or that he had "accepted responsibility for it." ...
In 1989, while managing the Cincinnati Reds, Rose agreed to a lifetime ban from Major League Baseball after he was found to have bet on the sport and his own team. Rose, however, did little to ...
Major League Baseball decided last month to lift the permanent ban on Pete Rose, and Alex Rodriguez believes the Cincinnati Reds legend would still be alive had the move been made sooner.
Rose and then-commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti agreed to a permanent ban in August 1989 after an investigation commissioned by MLB concluded that Rose repeatedly bet on the Reds as a player and ...
Rose is Major League Baseball's all-time hits leader who in 1989 was banned from the game for life after an investigation led by Dowd, then MLB's special counsel, concluded Rose had bet on ...