News

Pete Rose, the deceased all-time hit king whose gambling on baseball banished him from the game, was posthumously removed from Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list by commissioner ...
Major League Baseball has reinstated baseball’s all-time hit leader, but should Pete Rose be in the Hall of Fame?
In this opinion column for the A-J, Drew Landry looks at the mixed legacy of Pete Rose and the recent MLB choice to reinstate the baseball legend.
Many of us longtime baseball people were heartened to hear on Tuesday that Pete Rose finally has a chance to get into baseball’s Hall of Fame. But does Rose really have a chance?
Pete Rose, other deceased players are officially removed from MLB’s permanently ineligible list. Thirty-eight years ago, Pete Rose phoned a Triple-A shortstop named Barry Larkin — a Cincinnati ...
After previously being on the ineligible list, Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson are now eligible to be inducted into Baseball’s Hall of Fame. The two immensely talented players were both ...
Using the head-first slide he made famous in his years at Cincinnati, Pete Rose dives toward home plate in 1984.
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred’s decision to lift the permanent ban on Pete Rose was appropriate not because Rose should be enshrined, but because he deserves the chance.
Pete Rose was a Hall of Fame-worthy MLB player, no doubt. But there's a lot of baggage in his locker. Meanwhile, Shoeless Joe Jackson is back in play.
Pete Rose, 'Shoeless' Joe Jackson and 14 others were posthumously removed from MLB's ineligible list, making Hall of Fame induction possible for all of them.
Pete Rose was banned from baseball after an investigation revealed that he bet on Cincinnati Reds games while he was a player and manager for the team.