Pete Rose family celebrates reinstatement of Reds legend
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Pete Rose, along with the banished members of the 1919 Chicago White Sox, have been reinstated by Major League Baseball, opening up a pathway to the National Baseball Hall of Fame for Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson.
The most important implication of Manfred's decision has to do with the Baseball Hall of Fame. Pursuant to Rose's placement on the permanently ineligible list, the Hall in 1991 ruled that players on that list could not be elected into the Hall of Fame.
In a party for the Pete Hegseths, Tate bros and all the bad boys of the world, 'Charlie Hustle' wouldn't let death keep him away.
Marty Brennaman: "(Pete Rose) dies and dammit, five months later they elect to make him eligible again. I've got a real problem with that."
Pete Rose’s daughter was in the Seattle airport, getting ready to fly to Cincinnati for a night honoring her father, when she learned the news. “The emotion just kind of came over me,” Fawn Rose, the oldest of Pete’s five children,
MLB commissioner Rob Manfred has posthumously removed the disgraced Cincinnati Reds legend and the outfielder caught up in the Black Sox scandal from the permanently ineligible list.