Pete Rose reinstated by MLB and is eligible for Baseball Hall of Fame

Pete Rose reinstated by MLB and is eligible for Baseball Hall of Fame Pete Rose reinstated by MLB and is eligible for Baseball Hall of Fame

Pete Rose has officially been taken off MLB’s permanently ineligible list, the league announced Tuesday. Baseball’s all-time hit leader has been banned since 1989 after an investigation revealed the longtime Cincinnati Reds star placed bets while playing for and managing the team. 

The decision would make Rose, who died at 83 last September, eligible to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. 

In April, Manfred said he met with Trump to discuss topics including how immigration policies could affect international players. Rose also was a point of discussion.

“I met with President Trump two weeks ago … and one of the topics was Pete Rose, but I’m not going beyond that,” Manfred said at the time. “He’s said what he said publicly. I’m not going beyond that in terms of what the back and forth was.”

Trump said on Truth Social in March that he planned on “signing a complete pardon of Pete Rose, who shouldn’t have been gambling on baseball, but only bet on his team winning.

“He never betted against himself, or the other team. He had the most hits, by far, in baseball history, and won more games than anyone in sports history.”

After denying he bet on baseball for more than a decade, Rose finally admitted it in an interview with ABC in 2007. 

“I bet on baseball in 1987 and 1988,” he said. “That was my mistake, not coming clean a lot earlier.”

In his 2004 book “My Prison Without Bars,” Rose added that he bet on his own team. 

‘’My actions, which I thought were benign, call the integrity of the game into question,’’ Rose said. “And there’s no excuse for that, but there’s also no reason to punish me forever.’’

Rose played from 1963 to 1986 primarily with the Reds but also the Philadelphia Phillies and Montreal Expos. A 17-time MLB All-Star and three-time World Series champion, he has the most hits (4,256), most games (3,562) and most at-bats (14,053) in league history.