The Arizona Republic

Rose ‘too early’ for MLB view on betting

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

Pete Rose heard the news Wednesday morning, but instead of being bitter, resentful or even hateful towards Major League Baseball, he instead felt jealousy.

“I just came up at the wrong time,” Rose told USA TODAY Sports. “I was 30 years too early.”

Colorado Rockies All-Star outfielder Charlie Blackmon became the first active Major League Baseball player to endorse a bookmaker. It’s a partnershi­p in which Blackmon will be an ambassador in marketing campaigns, promotions, social media content and at events for the Colorado-based online sportsbook.

“Baseball is pretty much in bed with gambling now,” Rose said.

Rose, baseball’s all-time hits king, understand­s the irony with Blackmon’s deal with MaximBet. Rose received a lifetime ban from baseball in 1989 when an investigat­ion revealed that he gambled on baseball games while managing the Cincinnati Reds.

He accepted a permanent place on baseball’s ineligible list, and two years later, the Hall of Fame voted to exclude all individual­s on the permanentl­y ineligible list.

Rose has applied for reinstatem­ent with three different commission­ers, but his status remains unchanged.

The only change has been MLB’s position on gambling. It now openly embraces the gambling industry, advertisin­g on telecasts, with permanent sportsbook­s planned on the grounds of three different baseball stadiums.

MLB still prohibits players and team officials to bet on the sport, but with marketing and sponsorshi­p deals with sportsbook­s now open to players, certainly Rose can certainly argue that a 33-year suspension is punishment enough.

“Look, I [expletive] up,” Rose said. “I messed up when I did what I did, ok? I can’t bring it back.

“However, I would wish baseball would just give me an opportunit­y to be on the [Hall of Fame] ballot. Not, put me in, let the writers decide. I’ve

been suspended since ’89, 33 years ago. That’s a long time. And to be honest with you, it probably cost me $100 million.

“I’m not complainin­g, I’m just saying I’ve been punished pretty severely.”

Rose, who watches two or three baseball games a day, still is involved with gambling podcasts three or four days a week, saying he was accurate on 75% of his prognostic­ations last year. Gambling is big business, and he doesn’t blame baseball for wanting a piece of the lucrative pie.

“Baseball has come to realize there’s a lot of money in the gambling industry,” Rose said, “and they can benefit by getting their fair share.”

Rose, who says every day of his life is consumed watching sports, believes that some of baseball’s upcoming rule changes may be designed because of gambling influence.

The automated strike zone appears to be coming simply for gamblers who want to bet on every pitch, taking the human element out of the game.

Who wants to be the home-plate umpire who misses a couple of ball-strike calls late in the game and be subjected to accusation­s of being on the take, or worse, being threatened by gamblers?

The newest rules that are expected to be implemente­d in 2023 are a pitch clock, restrictio­ns on shifts and enlarged bases.

“When you talk about baseball, name me a rule change in the last five, eight years that have made baseball better for me and you to watch,” Rose says. “You’re not allowed to break up the double play. You’re not allowed to slide into the catcher. You’re not allowed to pitch inside.

“Baseball changes all of the rules but the one thing you don’t try to close in on is the time of the [expletive] game. That’s the divider going across the country, how long baseball games are. You have too many pitching changes today, the more pitching changes you have, the longer the game will be.”

 ?? SAM GREENE/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? Pete Rose, pictured here in June 2017, has applied for reinstatem­ent with three different commission­ers, but his status remains unchanged. The only change has been MLB’s position on gambling.
SAM GREENE/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Pete Rose, pictured here in June 2017, has applied for reinstatem­ent with three different commission­ers, but his status remains unchanged. The only change has been MLB’s position on gambling.
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