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President Donald Trump was one of the heavy hitters who helped convince Major League Baseball to reverse slugger Pete Rose’s ...
Commissioner Rob Manfred’s decision Tuesday to remove Pete Rose and “Shoeless” Joe Jackson, among others, from baseball’s ...
Casual fans often equated Pete Rose’s ban from baseball with a banishment from Cooperstown’s shrine. But reinstatement ...
The Post welcomes letters to the editor on any subject, especially those that expand upon the ideas raised by published ...
Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that players punished with permanent ineligibility will be reinstated after their deaths, and the Hall of Fame said it would consider such players for inclusion.
Pete Rose, 'Shoeless' Joe Jackson and 14 others were posthumously removed from MLB's ineligible list, making Hall of Fame induction possible for all of them.
Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred set a long overdue precedent on Tuesday by formally announcing permanent ...
Pete Rose is, somewhat stunningly, off Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list. But that doesn’t mean he’s automatically in the Hall of Fame. Casual baseball fans often equated ...
Pete Rose has been removed from the MLB's permanently ineligible list. So when can he go into the Hall of Fame?
Baseball’s all-time hits king, who died Sept. 30 at age 83, joins Shoeless Joe Jackson in having permanent ineligibility lifted for sports gambling scandals.
When Rob Manfred announced Tuesday that a dead man can no longer be banned from baseball, my first thought was this: If Pete Rose is going into the Hall of Fame, then Barry Bonds is too.
Both among a handful of players reinstated after Commissioner Rob Manfred ruled that ineligibility bans now expire after death.