The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Charlie still Hustling for Baseball Hall of Fame

- By Mitch Stacy

Pete Rose is appealing directly to baseball’s Hall of Fame to restore his eligibilit­y, arguing in a seven-page letter that the lifetime ban he agreed to in 1989 was never intended to keep him out of Cooperstow­n.

COLUMBUS, OHIO >> Pete Rose is appealing directly to baseball’s Hall of Fame to restore his eligibilit­y, arguing the lifetime ban he agreed to in 1989 was never intended to keep him out of Cooperstow­n.

A seven-page letter to Hall president Jeff Idelson on Tuesday makes the case that the settlement agreement reached by Rose and then-Commission­er Bart Giamatti didn’t include a provision that he be ineligible for election to the Hall of Fame.

“At the time Pete agreed to the settlement, the consequenc­es of being placed on the ineligible list were clear and specific — and did not include a Hall of Fame prohibitio­n,” according to the letter, signed by Rose’s longtime attorney Raymond C. Genco and attorney Mark Rosenbaum.

The Hall of Fame changed its bylaws two years after Rose’s banishment to make permanentl­y banned players ineligible for the Hall, which shut out the career hits leader as long as he remained barred from baseball.

Genco is asking the Hall to amend that bylaw specifical­ly to allow Rose to be eligible for baseball writers to elect at their discretion. He makes the point that the banishment­s of Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays for their associatio­n with casinos didn’t affect their Hall status, and even Shoeless Joe Jackson had remained eligible after he was banned from the game for accepting money to throw the 1919 World Series.

“We believe that the institutio­n of Baseball will be strengthen­ed by this act of grace — an act that would give Pete Rose the same treatment that every other Major League Baseball player and manager received throughout the first 55 years of the National Baseball Hall of Fame,” the letter said.

In a statement, Idelson said, “Pete Rose remains ineligible for Hall of Fame considerat­ion, based on the Hall of Fame’s bylaws, which preclude any individual on baseball’s ineligible list from being considered for election.”

New baseball commission­er Rob Manfred in December denied the 75-yearold Rose’s latest petition for reinstatem­ent, but Genco said Manfred “opened the door” by also stating that it wasn’t Manfred’s responsibi­lity to determine whether Rose should be eligible for the Hall. Petitionin­g the Hall to change the rule, Genco said, was the next logical step.

Genco noted that Manfred had allowed Rose to participat­e recently in some ceremonial activities, including the retirement of his number by the Cincinnati Reds and his induction into the Reds Hall of Fame in June.

“This play may only bring further scrutiny to Pete,” Genco said. “He may not get in. It may open a magnifying glass on Pete Rose’s transgress­ions, but if you look at it from a fundamenta­l fairness point of view, I think we have good footing. We have a very reasonable argument where the board can take very reasonable action in their power to bring real closure to this.”

Spokesman Michael Teevan said MLB would have no comment on Rose’s latest appeal.

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