Dear Rob letter
Rose pleads case to Manfred to be considered for Hall
Charlie Hustle is still trying to push his way into the Hall of Fame.
Baseball legend Pete Rose sent MLB commissioner Rob Manfred a letter this week to once again plead his case for entry into Cooperstown.
“I am writing today for three reasons,” Rose said in the letter, first obtained by TMZ. “First, because at my age I want to be 100% sure that you understand how much I mean it when I say that I’m sorry. Second, to ask for your forgiveness. And third, because I still think every day about what it would mean to be considered for the Hall of Fame.”
Rose, 81, acknowledged he let down a lot of people and said his mistakes are his biggest regrets in life.
“Besides spending time with my kids and my partner, there’s nothing that made me happier than playing baseball in front of fans,” he wrote. “That I let them down and brought shame to the sport we all love is something I think about every single day.”
Rose’s legendary career would have made him a lock for the Hall of Fame. He holds the record for hits with 4,256, had 1,314 RBIs and boasted a career batting average of .303. He made 17 AllStar appearances and was named NL MVP in 1973 along with World Series MVP in 1975, the first of three titles in his 24-year career with the Reds, Phillies and Expos.
He isn’t among those enshrined in Cooperstown, however, due to his time as manager of the Reds from 1984-1989, when he bet on baseball games and then denied that he did. The Reds will open a BetMGM sportsbook in Great American Ballpark in 2023.
Rose was banned by MLB commissioner Bart Giamatti in 1989. His 2015 attempt at reinstatement was denied by Manfred.
“You can’t imagine how painful it is when I see my teammates from all the great teams I played on and players I played against go about their lives in ways I wanted to,” Rose wrote. “I want to be a part of that too and I know I probably never will. I am so grateful for the time I shared with them on and off the field. Nothing replaces it.”
Rose, who will reportedly place the first legal bet at the Hard Rock Casino in Cincinnati in 2023, concluded his letter to Manfred by acknowledging his accountability for his actions and asking for forgiveness while saying he is proud of what he accomplished during his career.
“I write now to ask for another chance,” he wrote.
Neither Manfred nor MLB has responded to Rose, per TMZ.