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Thomas Gase: Every Rose has its thorn. This one had a lot
During Pete Rose's career spanning three decades, he collected 4,256 hits, with every single one of them getting him to at least first base. None of them got him to Cooperstown. At least, not yet.
Major League Baseball's decision to reinstate Pete Rose, Shoeless Joe Jackson, Eddie Cicotte and other players banned for ...
Longtime Cincinnati Reds broadcaster Marty Brennaman has voiced strong criticism of MLB's decision to posthumously reinstate ...
The MLB action on Friday, May 16 continues out West with an interleague matchup that sees the Seattle Mariners visiting the ...
On the field, Pete Rose was everything a ballplayer should be. He was also the exact thing no ballplayer should be, on the ...
The HOF bid for Pete Rose and Ippei's latest continuance on his reporting date to prison top our stories of the week.
Longtime Cincinnati Reds announcer Marty Brennaman ripped Major League Baseball for their timing on their decision to ...
Watch Boston Red Sox left fielder Jarren Duran, left, potentially crown teammate Rafael Devers with a "Wally the Green ...
Rose had been on the league’s permanently ineligible list since Aug. 1989 for gambling on baseball while serving as manager ...
Shohei Ohtani homered twice in a thrashing of the Athletics, but was on the wrong end of another rare feat when he struck out ...
At long last, Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson can be considered for the baseball's hall of fame. Their banishment never matched their transgressions.
The decision to remove the lifetime bans of Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson open up a complicated debate about baseball history. Steve Phillips has more.