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    Baseball legend Pete Rose makes his final pitch for the Hall of Fame

    By Austin Turner,

    2024-09-07

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3jzodL_0vOIDgZj00

    The story of baseball cannot be told without Pete Rose.

    Major League Baseball’s all-time leader in base hits, with 4,256, has also played more games than any other player in league history.

    In many ways, Rose is baseball. But in the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, NY, his plaque is nowhere to be found. His statistics, his achievements and his impact on the sport speak for themselves — but those aren’t enough to turn the black cloud over Rose’s head into sunshine.

    “There’s nothing I can change about the history of Pete Rose,” the baseball legend recently told KTLA in a new interview.

    That history is a complicated one.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0Tv5Ys_0vOIDgZj00
    Cincinnati Reds Pete Rose sees his hard grounder go past first base for a single in the 6th inning at Atlanta Fulton County Stadium, July 31, 1978. (AP Photo)

    At the tail end of his long playing career, primarily for the Cincinnati Reds, Rose became the team’s player-manager, an ultra-rare position in sports. After a few seasons, he hung up his cleats and just managed the team.

    In 1989, while still serving as the club’s manager, reports began to surface that Rose had placed bets on baseball . The ensuing controversy resulted in a legacy-shifting decision in August of that year when he accepted a deal with MLB to be permanently placed on the league’s ineligibility list.

    That meant he couldn’t participate in MLB in an official capacity — ever again. In 1991, it was ruled that individuals on the ineligibility list couldn’t be inducted into the Hall of Fame. He likely would have been a first-ballot induction just the following year.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1vReBz_0vOIDgZj00
    Former Cincinnati Reds player Pete Rose, left, waves to the crowd alongside Reds great Johnny Bench, right, during a ceremony to retire his No. 14 before a baseball game against the San Diego Padres, Sunday, June 26, 2016, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

    After years of denial, in 2004, Rose publicly admitted to betting on baseball — and the Reds —during his career.

    “Eventually, everybody in the world is going to hear me say, I’m sorry I bet on baseball,” Rose said.

    Rose is convinced he deserves a second chance and recognizes, at 83 years old, that time might be running out. The three-time World Series champion wants to be a Hall of Famer.

    As he looks back on life, Rose says “I keep convincing myself or telling myself, ‘hang in there, Pete, you’ll get a second chance.’”

    “I’ve been suspended for over 30 years and haven’t been close to a second chance,” he said. “And I won’t need a third chance.”

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

    For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to KTLA.

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    Comments / 272
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    Schmeets Karen
    11d ago
    Baseball has wrong this man by letting him pass before he got into the Hall of Fame. Nothing you can do now can change that, but this needs to be corrected. All the crap that baseball players get involved in drugs and other scandals and he bet on one game and you kept him out that is wrong.
    DENNIS T. MENACE
    09-10
    Time to take it to the fans! One person shouldn't have the final say in this matter, with everything the league has allowed over the years this is nothing!
    View all comments
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