Current:Home > ScamsWhy status of Pete Rose's 'lifetime' ban from MLB won't change with his death -WealthRoots Academy
Why status of Pete Rose's 'lifetime' ban from MLB won't change with his death
View
Date:2025-04-21 10:41:28
That life sentence Pete Rose got from baseball for gambling?
It doesn't just go away now that the Cincinnati Reds great and all-time baseball icon died Monday at age 83 in Las Vegas of natural causes. The Hall of Fame welcome wagon isn't suddenly showing up at his family's doorstep anytime soon.
That's because contrary to widespread assumptions and even a few media reports, Rose's 1989 ban for gambling on baseball was not a "lifetime" ban. It was a permanent ban.
He was put on baseball's "permanently ineligible" list, along with the likes of Shoeless Joe Jackson and the seven other Chicago White Sox players MLB determined to have thrown the 1919 World Series.
And that's not even why he's ineligible for the Hall of Fame. At least not directly.
Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.
As commissioner Rob Manfred has been quick to point out in recent years when asked about Rose, MLB has no say in who's eligible to be enshrined in the Hall of Fame.
The National Baseball Hall of Fame is a separate institution, established in 1936 (60 years after the National League was founded, 35 after the American League). It makes its own eligibility rules, which it did in 1991 on this subject, specifically to address Rose.
The Hall made him ineligible in a separate move as he approached what otherwise would have been his first year on the ballot. The board determined anyone on MLB's permanently ineligible list will, in turn, be ineligible for Hall of Fame consideration. The board has upheld that decision with subsequent votes.
That's a step it did not take for Jackson or the other banned White Sox players when the Hall opened the process for its inaugural class 15 years after those players were banned. Jackson received a few scattered votes but never came close to being elected.
In the first year of the Hall’s ban, Rose received 41 write-in votes, which were thrown out and not counted.
“Ultimately, the board has continued to look at this numerous times over 35 years and continues to believe that the rule put in place is the right one for the Hall of Fame,” said Josh Rawitch, Hall of Fame president. “And for those who have not been reinstated from the permanently ineligible list, they shouldn’t be eligible for our ballots.”
As long as that rule remains, it will be up to Manfred or his successor(s) to make a path for the posthumous induction of baseball's Hit King.
“All I can tell you for sure is that I’m not going to go to bed every night in the near future and say a prayer that I hope I go in the Hall of Fame,” Rose told the Enquirer this season during his final sit-down interview before his death. “This may sound cocky – I am cocky, by the way – but I know what kind of player I was. I know what kind of records I got. My fans know what kind of player I was.
"And if it's OK for (fans) to put me in the Hall of Fame, I don’t need a bunch of guys on a committee somewhere."
veryGood! (4377)
Related
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- USMNT scores three second-half goals to win in its Concacaf Nations League opener
- The 'Friends' family is mourning one of its own on social media
- Thousands of bodies lie buried in rubble in Gaza. Families dig to retrieve them, often by hand
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Judge rules against tribes in fight over Nevada lithium mine they say is near sacred massacre site
- Why does Apple TV+ have so many of the best streaming shows you've never heard of?
- Man accused of abducting, beating woman over 4-day period pleads not guilty
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Soldier, her spouse and their 2 children found dead at Fort Stewart in Georgia
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Massachusetts lawmakers fail to approve $250M in emergency shelter aid
- Boston pays $2.6M to Black police officers who alleged racial bias in hair tests for drug use
- Rory McIlroy has shot land hilariously on woman's lap at World Tour Championship
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Washington police search for couple they say disappeared under suspicious circumstance
- Stefon Diggs distances himself from brother Trevon's opinions of Bills, Josh Allen
- Ghana reparations summit calls for global fund to compensate Africans for slave trade
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Will Captain Sandy Yawn Get Married on Below Deck Mediterranean? She Says...
Group asks Michigan Supreme Court to hear an appeal of a ruling in Trump ballot case
5 European nations and Canada seek to join genocide case against Myanmar at top UN court
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Kaitlin Armstrong found guilty in shooting death of pro cyclist Anna Mo Wilson
Powerball winning numbers for Wednesday drawing: Jackpot rises to $280 million
Mississippi man had ID in his pocket when he was buried without his family’s knowledge