Pete Rose Is Finally Eligible For the Hall of Fame — Postumously
In one of the cruelest rulings, perhaps, in baseball history, commissioner Rob Manfred has determined that Pete Rose, and other deceased ballplayers who had been on baseball ineligible list and therefore banned from Hall of Fame entrance, are now reinstated, and eligible for the Hall.
BREAKING: MLB commissioner Rob Manfred removed Pete Rose, "Shoeless" Joe Jackson and other deceased players from the league's permanently ineligible list on Tuesday.
— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) May 13, 2025
Manfred ruled that MLB's punishment of banned individuals ends upon their deaths. pic.twitter.com/1oNmGxaGA7
Manfred ruled that the punishment of banned individuals ends upon their deaths. Guess that's why it's called a 'lifetime' ban. Too late to celebrate, unfortunately, for those involved.
Shoeless Joe Jackson is also among the list of 17 deceased individuals removed from MLB’s ineligible list.
Since being banned from baseball for life back in 1989 for betting on the sport, Rose had battled continuously to get himself reinstated and into the Hall of Fame. He passed away at the age of 83 this past September.
In 24 seasons, baseball's all-time Hit King had a lifetime batting average of .303, is major league baseball's career leader in hits with 4,256, as well as games played (3,562), at-bats (14,053), and singles (3,215). He's also a three-time World Series champion -- twice with the Cincinnati Reds and once with the Philadelphia Phillies. He was the Rookie of the Year in 1963, the NL MVP in 1973, and a 17-time All-Star.
The next time the Classic Baseball Era committee meets to vote on inducting players who are not in the Hall is in December of 2027, to consider the ballot for the Class of 2028. This could be the ticket for Rose to finally be inducted — posthumously — to the Baseball Hall of Fame, something he wanted so badly during his lifetime.
In fact, as Tyler Kepner of The Athletic recounts, Rose once said, just 10 days before his death, “I’ve come to the conclusion – I hope I’m wrong – that I’ll make the Hall of Fame after I die."
It looks like he'll actually be right.
Reaction around the sport was swift.
Absolutely pathetic they waited for Pete Rose to pass away before giving him his day in the sun
— Gary Sheffield Jr. (@GarysheffieldJr) May 13, 2025
Reprehensible https://t.co/6a0q2AevIA
Pete Rose did nothing wrong, he was just a man way ahead of the times.
— Ricky Vaughn (@dvigilrpg) May 13, 2025
MLB partners with half a dozen gambling websites and make millions playing their ads during games.
Pete put money on his team to win and none of his bets EVER impacted the outcome of the game.
He should be… https://t.co/Myuh48jIOH pic.twitter.com/NSMiN0MkEt
Put Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe in the Hall of Fame. Their plaques can tell the full story and make sure their induction ceremony is sponsored by DraftKings or the like and can be watched on FanDuel Network. https://t.co/cggRtaytta
— Kevin Kernan (@AMBS_Kernan) May 13, 2025
A lifetime ban from employment in baseball was appropriate for Pete Rose, but the Hall of Fame should never have been connected to that. He should have been in decades ago. pic.twitter.com/s8XzxyPDXR
— Mike Greenberg (@Espngreeny) May 13, 2025