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Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred dropped a bombshell by lifting the lifetime bans on Pete Rose and “Shoeless” Joe Jackson.
2006 -- Barry Bonds hit his 715th home run during the San Francisco Giants ... stated that about 50 percent of current major league players used some form of steroids. 2003 -- Colorado, behind Todd ...
After the decision to remove Pete Rose from the permanently ineligible list, Bob Nightengale speaks on his Hall of Fame ...
It is perfectly appropriate for the lords of baseball to enforce whatever rules they believe were broken broke, and inflict ...
On the field, Pete Rose was everything a ballplayer should be. He was also the exact thing no ballplayer should be, on the field: compromised.
Rose, MLB’s all-time leader in hits (4,256), voluntarily agreed with Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti to a permanent ban on ...
And if pitchers actually have to throw to the senior first baseman for Arkansas, they don’t even want to flirt with the strike zone. Because if the barrel of Ellis’ bat meets the ...
If you’re going to open the door and welcome in Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe to the Hall of Fame, hold it open just a tad longer for the more modern disgraced titans who’ve also been barricaded from ...
Barry Bonds, for example, remains eligible for the ... Bonds maintained that he never knowingly used steroids in his career, but admitted to using substances provided by his trainer, which turned ...
The New York Yankees brought their offense west for their series against the Athletics over Mother’s Day Weekend. They won two of the three games, scoring 29 runs along the way. Yankees captain Aaron ...
There remains one player, however, that has been snubbed: Barry Bonds. Don’t think that steroids were fine or cheating is okay. Many players were probably not going to be as good as they were if ...