The Denver Post

You make the call, Pete Rose

Baseball’s banned all-time hits leader is hired by Fox Sports to serve as guest studio analyst.

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new york» Pete Rose is getting back in baseball while he awaits a ruling on his reinstatem­ent request — as a television analyst.

The career hits leader, who agreed to a lifetime ban from the sport 26 years ago, has been hired by Fox as a guest studio analyst.

“We informed baseball of Pete’s audition. Baseball was informed every step of the way,” Fox spokesman Dan Bell said Saturday.

Bell said Rose will not be in stadium broadcast booths. Since the ban began, Rose has not been allowed in areas of ballparks not open to fans, except with special approval from the commission­er’s office.

“As a courtesy, Fox informed us that they were interviewi­ng Pete Rose for an on-air studio position,” MLB said in a statement. “The decision to hire on-air talent for its telecasts rests solely with Fox.”

Rose, who turned 74 last week, agreed to the lifetime ban in August 1989 after a Major League Baseball investigat­ion concluded he bet on the Reds to win while managing the team.

Rose will appear on pregame and postgame shows on Fox and Fox Sports 1 and other programmin­g. Bell said Rose’s start date and the frequency of his appearance­s has not been determined. Fox will broadcast the All-Star Game in Cincinnati on July 14 — coincident­ally his uniform number.

For 15 years Rose denied he bet on baseball. In his 2004 autobiogra­phy, “Pete Rose: My Prison Without Bars,” Rose reversed his stand and acknowledg­ed he bet on the Reds while managing the team.

Rose, who had 4,256 hits during a 24-year career, applied for reinstatem­ent in September 1997 and met in November 2002 with commission­er Bud Selig, who never ruled on the applicatio­n. Rose submitted another applicatio­n for reinstatem­ent after Selig was succeeded by Rob Manfred in January. Manfred has said he wants to listen to Rose make his case before issuing a decision.

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