News
Rob Manfred defended his choice to reinstate Pete Rose, “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and other deceased banned players.
The latter was banned in 1920. The former banned in 1989. Manfred overturned those bans and reinstated the players on May 13.
MLB commissioner Rob Manfred called the decision to remove Pete Rose from the permanently ineligible list earlier this month ...
Rose had been banned from baseball since a ruling from commissioner Bart Giamatti back in 1989 following an investigation ...
The Post welcomes letters to the editor on any subject, especially those that expand upon the ideas raised by published ...
To believe that pressure from Donald Trump had nothing to do with Major League Baseball’s decision would require ignoring ...
A slight majority of Free Agent readers don't like draft lotteries (or at least a majority of the ones who took two minutes ...
It’s not hard to find people closely connected with baseball who believe that Pete Rose should never be allowed in the National Baseball Hall of Fame because he ...
With Yankees, Mets both in first place, a crazy summer in the city is bound to captivate CT; Hall didn’t need green light to consider Rose. The Sunday Read.
Opinion
Whether Pete Rose deserves induction is debatable, but whether his case deserves to be heard is notMLB Commissioner Rob Manfred’s decision to lift the permanent ban on Pete Rose was appropriate not because Rose should be enshrined, but because he deserves the chance.
Brennaman, who took part in the May 14 ceremony at Great American Ball Park honoring Pete Rose, did not hold back when asked about Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred’s decision to lift ...
Bonds’ comments came days after Manfred reversed a century-old policy, announcing that permanent bans in baseball would now expire upon a player’s death. The policy shift instantly made Rose and other ...
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