Pete Rose Dies At 83: MLB's All-Time Hits Leader Held Out Of Hall Of Fame After Lifetime Ban For Gambling

Pete Rose, MLB's all-time hits leader, has died at 83. Despite his impressive career and three World Series titles, his legacy is marred by a gambling scandal leading to his permanent ineligibility from baseball.

Monday, September 30th 2024, 6:46 pm

By: CBS Sports


Pete Rose, the all-time hits leader in Major League Baseball, has died at the age of 83.

The Rose family confirmed his passing to Sports Illustrated on Monday.

Rose spent parts of 24 seasons in the majors and over that span, he amassed 4,256 hits. On Sept. 11, 1985, Rose at age 44 passed Ty Cobb with his 4,192nd hit and became MLB's anointed Hit King. Of his nearly quarter-century in the majors, 19 of those seasons came with Rose's hometown Cincinnati Reds, whom he also managed at one point. Rose was a three-time World Series champion – first with the Reds in 1975 and 1976 and then with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1980. Along the way, Rose was selected to 17 All-Star teams, and he won the National League MVP Award in 1973 as a member of the Reds.

While Rose's on-field credentials as a player are unassailable and make him one of the all-time greats, the gambling scandal that led to his banishment from the game remains an indelible part of his baseball legacy. Rose has been on the permanently ineligible list since 1989 when he agreed to that punishment as a consequence of his gambling on MLB games -- alleged at the time but since confirmed. In his agreement with then-commissioner Bart Giamatti, Rose was permitted to apply for reinstatement, which he did multiple times over the years to no avail.

Rose initially denied betting on baseball for years, but then in 2002, he admitted to having bet on the sport as manager of the Reds. In 2015, he finally admitted to also betting as a player. Rose's bets were made in violation of MLB's Rule 21(d), which reads:

Rule 21 MISCONDUCT, (d) BETTING ON BALL GAMES, Any player, umpire, or club or league official or employee, who shall bet any sum whatsoever upon any baseball game in connection with which the bettor has a duty to perform shall be declared permanently ineligible.

Rose, an obvious first-ballot Hall of Famer based on his statistical merits, was never enshrined because of that permanent ineligibility. However, it wasn't until 1991 that the Hall of Fame ruled that players on the permanently ineligible list could not be elected or enshrined. That policy came into being roughly two years after Rose was placed on said list. It was also the year before he was scheduled to appear on the Baseball Writers Association of America Hall of Fame ballot. As a consequence, Hall voters have never had the opportunity to appraise Rose's statistical case through the prism of his gambling violations.

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