ReportWire

Tag: Pete Rose

  • Book Talk: My Big Red Machine, with author and journalist Terence Moore

    Moore’s “My Big Red Machine” is available in paperback and hardcover. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Major League Baseball’s postseason has begun, and for the teams and fan bases involved, there will be a chance to win a World Series title. One of those teams involved was the Cincinnati Reds; decades ago, in the 1970s, that franchise was one of the perennial favorites to win championships. 

    That team, nicknamed The Big Red Machine for its efficiency and power, had fans all over the country. One of those fans was sports writer and author Terence Moore. During Moore’s youth and later as a young reporter for the Cincinnati Enquirer, he had the unique opportunity to get close to the stars of The Big Red Machine, Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench, Ken Griffey, Sr., Tony Perez, and, of course, Pete Rose.

    Moore visited The Atlanta Voice to discuss his inspiration for his latest book, “My Big Red Machine,” walking the thin line between fandom and journalism, and his lifelong love for baseball.

    The Atlanta Voice: Good morning, Terence. Is this your first time inside The Atlanta Voice office?

    Terence Moore: Yeah, I can feel the history as we sit here right now. You can feel the history of the people that this paper represented through the years and decades. Black publications were so huge to the Civil Rights Movement in general, but particularly here in Atlanta.

    AV: How long have you been thinking about writing this book? I know you grew up in Cincinnati and had worked at one of the local daily newspapers. This book must have been special to report on.

    TM: It’s been forever. I would tell people different stories, and they would say that I needed to write about it. The Big Red Machine is the greatest team in baseball; that’s my story, and I’m sticking to it. The Reds of the 1970s won more games than anybody in baseball in that decade. And in 1975 and 1976, they won back-to-back world championships. This is the 50th anniversary of the first of those back-to-back championships. I figured the timing is perfect.

    Moore said, “My Big Red Machine” is about more than baseball. “It’s sort of a memoir about me as a young person idolizing this team and having another goal in life: becoming a journalist. It’s an interesting journey,” Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    AV: But this book is about more than baseball, correct?

    TM: The thing that I am very proud of about this book is that people are shocked that it’s not just a baseball book. It’s not just about The Big Red Machine; it’s not just about sports. It’s sort of a memoir about me as a young person idolizing this team, and also having another goal in life: becoming a journalist. It’s an interesting journey.

    AV: If you had to describe this book in a sentence, what would that sentence be?

    TM: It’s a riveting tale with great storytelling. The storytelling gives the reader the journey of not only my life, but the life of anybody who was passionate about anything in his or her life. And then having it come to fruition. 

    AV: How did it feel to be telling parts of your life, family, and career in this book? You have done this in your previous books, like in The Real Hank Aaron, but this went deeper.

    TM: It was an out-of-body experience. After I wrote this book, and then I read the proof, I was like, ‘Who wrote this?’ It was the strangest thing. There were passages that I know I obviously remember writing, and then there were other passages that I was like, ‘This was unbelievable.’ 

    Moore revealed that the entire project came together -from start to publication- in 13 months. “Somehow I was able to get this done,” he said.

    AV: On page 63 in chapter 3, you vividly describe the smells inside the old Crosley Field on your first visit with your family. The recall of the many personal and professional moments was so interesting. How did you remember so much detail?

    TM: A lot of people ask me that. Even before I was a reporter, I was a reporter. I’m very much my mother’s son; she never threw away anything. I save everything. It’s just unbelievable the stuff that I’ve saved through the years.

    One of the things I teach my journalism students is the big three: reporting, interviewing, and angles. It’s a must in anything that you do.  

    AV: In the book, you describe writing the first story ever on Ken Griffey, Jr. in the Cincinnati Enquirer in July 1978. Did you see anything special about the boy that told you he would become a future Baseball Hall of Fame inductee?

    TM: I’m at Riverfront Stadium in the summer of 1978, my first year of working at the Cincinnati Enquirer. One of the groundskeepers came up to me and told me I should do a story on Ken Griffey. I told him I had written tons of stories on Ken Griffey, and he said no, not the father, the son. I said ‘How old is he?’ and he said he’s eight years old. I said, ‘Ok.’

    Moore said that when he finally decided to look into how good Ken Griffey, Jr. really was, he was astounded that the groundskeeper’s tip was spot on. “He was the greatest eight-year-old kid I ever saw,” Moore said. 

    AV: What do you want readers to come away with from reading “My Big Red Machine”?

    TM: I want them to understand that you can bring stories alive through a lot of circumstances, situations, and experiences. That’s what I try to do. I try to bring stories alive by using myself as a vehicle to show different aspects of life. Because we can all relate to journeys, we can all relate to the journey of being a young person and having a fixation and passion for something. For me, it just happened to be this baseball team, this Big Red Machine. The greatest baseball team of all time.  

    Donnell Suggs

    Source link

  • Pete Rose left behind some batshit crazy signatures (13 Photos)

    Pete Rose left behind some batshit crazy signatures (13 Photos)

    As you’ve probably heard by now the ‘Hit King’, Pete Rose passed away this week. Charlie Hustle as he was lovingly nicknamed, was a three-time World Series champion. His 23-year playing career took him from the Reds to the Phillies to the Expos and back to the Reds.

    Perhaps most known for his gambling addiction, Rose was placed on the baseball ineligible list permanently in August of ’89. In layman’s terms? He was banned for life.

    I don’t pretend to know what that would do to a baseball player, let alone a professional who was the greatest hitter of all time. The irony being that since Rose has passed, is he now eligible for the Hall of Fame?

    For now we’ll just take a look back at some of the interesting signatures that Rose left behind. Here’s hoping he can now rest in peace.

    Zach

    Source link

  • Former Phillie Pete Rose, 83, passes away

    Former Phillie Pete Rose, 83, passes away

    Pete Rose, 83, passed away on Monday.

    On the field, Rose, Major League Baseball’s all-time leader in hits, at-bats and games played, was an integral member of the Phillies’ 1980 World Series team, the first championship squad in franchise history. Rose was a 17-time All-Star who also won World Series titles with the Cincinnati Reds in 1975 and 1976. 

    Rose’s off-the-field legacy is controversial. 

    In 1989, Rose was banned from baseball for allegedly betting on the sport, something that he admitted to decades later. The ban prevented him from being enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame despite his MLB hits record. 

    More recently, Rose was to be honored as an inductee in the Phillies’ Wall of Fame in 2017, but that event was canceled amidst allegations of statutory rape stemming from a relationship he had with a minor in the 1970s. 

    The Phillies released the following statement regarding Rose’s passing on Monday evening:

    Major League Baseball itself released this statement shortly after:

    Shamus Clancy

    Source link

  • Pete Rose Fast Facts | CNN

    Pete Rose Fast Facts | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the life of former Cincinnati Reds player and manager Pete Rose.

    Birth name: Peter Edward Rose

    Birth date: April 14, 1941

    Birth place: Cincinnati, Ohio

    Father: Harry Rose, bank clerk and semi-pro baseball and football player

    Mother: LaVerne Rose

    Marriages: Carol (Woliung) Rose, (April 11, 1984-2011, divorced); Karolyn (Englehardt) Rose (January 25, 1964-1980, divorced)

    Children: with Carol (Woliung) Rose: Kara and Tyler; with Karolyn (Englehardt) Rose: Pete Jr. and Fawn

    Military: Ohio Army National Guard

    He was nicknamed “Charlie Hustle” as a rookie.

    Rose holds the Major League Baseball record for the number of games played (3,562) and hits (4,256).

    He was on the National League All-Star team 17 times between 1965 and 1985.

    July 8, 1960 – Rose begins his pro career with the minor league team the Geneva Redlegs of the New York-Penn League.

    1963 – Plays his first season for the Cincinnati Reds. At the end of the season he is voted National League Rookie of the Year.

    1965 – Leads the league in hits with 209 and a batting average of .312. It is the first of 16 seasons in which his batting average is at least .300, the first of 10 seasons with 200 or more hits and the first of seven years leading the league in hits.

    1968-1969 – Wins the first two of his three batting titles.

    1969-1970 – Wins a Gold Glove both years for fielding excellence as an outfielder.

    1973 – Named National League Most Valuable Player and wins the batting title.

    1975 – Rose is named World Series Most Valuable Player after the Reds defeat the Boston Red Sox 4-3.

    December 5, 1978-October 19, 1983 – Plays for the Philadelphia Phillies and wins the 1980 World Series, beating the Kansas City Royals 4-3.

    1984 – Plays 95 games with the Montreal Expos.

    August 16, 1984 – Rose is hired as player/manager of the Cincinnati Reds.

    September 11, 1985 – At home against the San Diego Padres, Rose breaks Ty Cobb’s 57-year record of 4,191 career hits.

    November 11, 1986 – Rose is released as a player from the Reds but continues to manage the team through the 1988-1989 season.

    March 20, 1989 – An announcement from the office of the Baseball Commissioner reveals an ongoing investigation into allegations of Rose’s gambling. Details of the allegations are reported the next day in Sports Illustrated.

    August 24, 1989 – With a 225-page report, witness testimony and volumes of evidence to support his findings, baseball commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti bans Pete Rose from baseball for life for gambling, with the stipulation he may apply for reinstatement after one year.

    August 1990-January 1991 – Serves five months in the Federal Prison Camp in Marion, Illinois, after pleading guilty to tax evasion.

    September 23, 2002 – Plays in a celebrity softball game that he organized, to mark the closing of Cincinnati’s Cinergy Field; his first public game since banishment.

    January 8, 2004 – Rose’s autobiography, “My Prison Without Bars,” is published. In the book Rose admits to betting on baseball while managing the Cincinnati Reds.

    March 14, 2007 – During a radio interview with ESPN, Rose admits to betting on every Cincinnati game while he was manager.

    January 13, 2013 – The reality show “Pete Rose: Hits and Mrs.,” about life with fiancée, Kiana Kim, premieres on TLC. The show is canceled after the fourth episode.

    March 2015 – Rose submits a formal request to Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred seeking reinstatement. On December 14, 2015, it is announced that Rose’s application has been denied.

    April 18, 2015 – It is announced that Rose has been hired by Fox as a baseball analyst.

    July 7, 2016 – Files a defamation lawsuit against attorney John Dowd for comments Dowd made suggesting that Rose committed statutory rape. Dowd, who led the investigation into Rose’s gambling on baseball, tells NJ Advance Media the allegations have been “blown out of proportion.”

    September 27, 2016 – Rose sends a letter to the National Baseball Hall of Fame asking that he be made eligible for inclusion, which would put his name on the ballot to be voted on by baseball writers.

    July 31, 2017 – Court records reveal an unidentified woman has provided a sworn statement alleging that in the 1970s she had sex with Rose before she turned 16. The statement is part of the defamation lawsuit Rose filed against Dowd. Rose acknowledged that he had a relationship with the woman but said he believed she was 16 at the time. On December 14, 2017, the defamation lawsuit is dismissed.

    February 5, 2020 – Rose’s attorneys petition MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred for Rose to be reinstated. They argue that Rose’s “ongoing punishment for an act that never impacted a single play or game outcome is no longer justifiable as a proportional response to his transgressions.”

    October 7, 2021 – Debut of “Pete Rose’s Daily Picks,” a sports betting podcast hosted by Rose.

    Source link

  • Miracle Met Bud Harrelson leaves behind legacy that extends well beyond the baseball field

    Miracle Met Bud Harrelson leaves behind legacy that extends well beyond the baseball field


    Bud Harrelson will be remembered for many things.

    Teammates remember how much he loved playing for the Mets. A slick-fielding shortstop on the 1969 Miracle Mets World Series team, Harrelson played with pride, passion and with an edge to his game. When the former Mets infielder and manager died at 79 after a battle with Alzheimer’s disease earlier this month, the tributes came pouring in from all over the baseball world.

    Even Pete Rose paid tribute to Harrelson, remembering him as a “good guy.” Harrelson, a smaller, scrappier player, infamously took on baseball’s controversial hit king during the 1973 NLCS, starting a scuffle that led to a benches-clearing brawl at Shea Stadium.

    Fans remember Harrelson as an affable, friendly face. He sat for long lines of autographs and he posed for photos with kids. Born Derrel McKinley Harrelson, the nickname “Buddy” was apt since everyone who met him felt like he was their buddy.

    “Bud was the same friendly giving individual whether you met him at the ballpark or the gas station,” Frank Boulton, his longtime business partner with the Long Island Ducks, told the Daily News.

    Make no mistake, while much of his career came in Queens, his influence went far beyond. It extended to those he helped get back into affiliated baseball and it extended to other families affected by Alzheimer’s, with the Harrelson family having helped to raise $61,000 for the Walk to End Alzheimer’s.

    With the Mets, Harrelson played in two World Series (1969 and 1973) and coached in another (1986). He managed Mets affiliates in the 1980s and in the big leagues when was named the successor to Davey Johnson in 1990. It was this experience that became key for Harrelson a decade later.

    A native of the San Francisco Bay Area, Harrelson made his home on Long Island and it truly did become a home for him. This is why Harrelson brought the Ducks to Long Island and why, after receiving his diagnosis in 2016, he helped raise money for the local chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association.

    While his accomplishments later in life may look like a footnote compared to his illustrious Major League career, to him, it was his legacy.

    “Bud, on many occasions, claimed the Ducks were the best thing he ever did in professional baseball,” Boulton said. “I truly believe the connection with our fan base was the driving factor. He loved to engage with our fans.”

    Bud Harrelson

    Boulton founded the Atlantic League in 1998, not long before he was connected with Harrelson.

    Independent leagues have come and gone throughout the years, but the Atlantic League has seen considerable success. It can often be seen as a last stop of sorts for players who are unable to get contracts with affiliated teams, but it’s much more than that. Players have parlayed Atlantic League contracts into second chances at affiliated ball, or even a second chance in the big leagues.

    The league now works with MLB to test new rules and has even welcomed women onto its teams.

    Harrelson’s first foray into minor league ownership was with Boulton. A former trader from Brightwaters, Boulton was introduced to Harrelson in 1991. He previously owned two minor league teams affiliated with the Yankees and Harrelson expressed interest in minor league ownership. The two purchased the Peninsula Pilots, a Class-A Carolina League team, and relocated it to Wilmington Delaware.

    Boulton and Harrelson would talk about their desire to bring a minor league team to Long Island on car rides up from Delaware to New York.

    “Bud and I, on rides back and forth to Wilmington, knew that if we could bring professional baseball to Long Island it would be successful,” Boulton said. “And 24 years later and 9 million fans through our gates, we accomplished our goal of bringing affordable family entertainment to our friends and neighbors on Long Island.”

    Harrelson took great pride in bringing a quality product to his home when the team was founded in 2000. He was the Atlantic League’s first president and the Ducks’ first manager, helping to bring credibility to an emerging team.

    Harrelson was a fixture at the ballpark even after he stopped managing. He would make the drive from his home in Hauppauge often, interacting with fans, players and even the mascot, QuackerJack.

    “He coached from 2001-2018, he would be the first base coach at home games, catch a ceremonial first pitch from a sponsor, then he would want to go upstairs [with the fans],” said Michael Pfaff, the Ducks president and chief business officer. “He’d go up to the luxury suites and he would take pictures with fans and sign autographs. He would just be everybody’s buddy. He created a tremendous amount of memories.”

    Pfaff came to the Ducks in 2022 from the NFL where he worked for the office of the commissioner. When he pulled into the parking lot of the ballpark for his interview, Harrelson was in the parking lot waving to him as if the two had known each other for years.

    “But had a very unique talent of making everyone feel like he knew them,” Pfaff said. “From the minute they met him, he made them feel like they had been lifelong friends. And I’m no different in that regard.”

    Harrelson kept coming to the ballpark even after his Alzheimer’s diagnosis in 2016, though not as much as he once did. It was around that time that he started going to support group meetings with the Long Island chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, along with his ex-wife, Kim Battaglia, who became his caretaker. Harrelson didn’t go public with the diagnosis right away, but when he did, he made sure the Alzheimer’s Association was involved.

    They got in touch with the chapter’s executive director Doug Davidson, who feared that Harrelson would find out that he was a Chicago Cubs fan during an introductory dinner.

    “I was scared out of my mind,” Davidson joked.

    Battaglia, Harrelson and his five kids formed “Team Harrelson.” They not only managed his care as the disease progressed but they also got involved with advocacy efforts. Harrelson and Battaglia joined the board of directors and he became a chairman of the walk. The Ducks put together an Alzheimer’s awareness night at the ballpark, where his daughter, Kassandra, “brought down the house” with a speech.

    It was so impressive, she ended up becoming the keynote speaker at a caregiver conference.

    “The family became so full-on with the mission,” Davidson said. “Bud’s message was that he wanted to help educate others and help spread awareness. I just was blown away that a man who had accomplished all this was helping. It was unfortunate enough to be suffering with this horrible disease, and yet he was still so selfless in wanting to help others.”

    A study released last year showed that the east and southeastern U.S. have the highest prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease. In 2023, Suffolk County, where Harrelson resided, ranked 11th of 62 counties with a prevalence rate of 11.7%. More than 30,000 people over the age of 65 are estimated to be living with Alzheimer’s in the county.

    Disease doesn’t discriminate. Harrelson might have been a member of the Mets Hall of Fame and a beloved member of his community, and still, Alzheimer’s took hold of him, erasing his memory and his motor functions. What we’re left with is memories of Harrelson.

    His memory will live on with the Alzheimer’s Association, with the money he raised helping other families understand how to cope with a terrible disease.

    His memory will live on with the Ducks. The team already retired his number in 2018, holding a night dedicated just for him. They plan to play with patches embroidered with No. 3 on them this season. He is still listed as an owner on the team website, along with Boulton and Seth Waugh.

    Harrelson made an imprint on New York baseball that few could ever forget.

    “The Ducks are part of the fabric of the community that he cared so much about,” Pfaff said. “Providing affordable entertainment in a market where that doesn’t exist is something that is a benefit to the community. It’s a quality of life benefit… We consider it an honor to continue that legacy for as long as the Ducks play.”



    Abbey Mastracco

    Source link

  • Bonds, Clemens Hall of Fame bids now on even shakier ground

    Bonds, Clemens Hall of Fame bids now on even shakier ground

    SAN DIEGO — Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens were rejected by baseball writers in their bids for the Baseball Hall of Fame ten times. On Sunday, the duo chased by steroid suspicions got another rebuke from a panel that included many of their peers.

    The door hasn’t formally shut on their Cooperstown chances. But the latest letdown means the pair — with eight MVPs and seven Cy Young Awards between them — may never be celebrated with the sport’s greatest individual honor.

    Fred McGriff was the only player elected Sunday to the Hall of Fame by a 16-member contemporary era committee, one of several groups credentialed to seal a player’s enshrinement. McGriff was chosen unanimously, while neither Bonds or Clemens received more than three votes.

    When it comes to the Baseball Hall of Fame, there are several potential avenues to induction, but it can be a very bumpy road for all but the most straightforward cases.

    HOW CAN PLAYERS BE ELECTED TO THE BASEBALL HALL OF FAME?

    Players are first considered by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America no sooner than five calendar years after their big league career ends. A BBWAA screening committee creates the annual ballot, and members who have been active baseball writers for at least 10 years are eligible to vote.

    Players on Major League Baseball’s ineligible list cannot appear on BBWAA ballots, the mechanism by which Pete Rose has been excluded from consideration. Voters are instructed to base their decisions on “the player’s record, playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship, character, and contributions to the team(s) on which the player played.”

    The result of this year’s writers’ vote — which requires 75% for induction — will be announced Jan. 24.

    Players are removed from the BBWAA ballot if they receive less than 5% of the vote. They also are taken off after 10 appearances. Bonds (66%), Clemens (65%) and Curt Schilling (58.6%) fell well short in their final chances on the BBWAA ballot last January.

    Once a player is no longer being considered by the BBWAA, his case shifts to the Hall’s committee system — divided into the contemporary and classic eras. The contemporary era committee considers candidates whose careers were primarily from 1980 on. The classic panel examines players who had their most significant impact on the game prior to 1980.

    The committees rotate yearly. The contemporary committee approved McGriff on Sunday at baseball’s winter meetings in San Diego. Another contemporary committee meets next year to consider managers, executives and umpires. The classic committee votes in December 2024.

    The ballot for each panel consists of eight candidates selected by a BBWAA-appointed historical overview committee. There is no limit when it comes to how often a candidate can appear on an era ballot.

    Rose also is ineligible for era ballots because of his inclusion on MLB’s ineligible list.

    The 16 members of each era committee — comprised of Hall of Famers, executives and writers — are appointed by the Hall’s Board of Directors. Voters can select as many as three candidates, and the support of 75% of ballots cast are required for induction.

    WHAT NOW FOR BONDS, CLEMENS AND SCHILLING?

    The next time Bonds, Clemens and Schilling could be considered would be by a contemporary committee for the 2026 Hall of Fame class.

    Bonds and Clemens look like no-doubt Hall members on the backs of their baseball cards, and Schilling has a strong case, as well.

    A seven-time NL MVP, Bonds set the career home run record with 762 and the season record with 73 in 2001. A seven-time Cy Young Award winner, Clemens went 354-184 with a 3.12 ERA and 4,672 strikeouts. Schilling went 216-146 with a 3.46 ERA in 20 seasons, winning the World Series with Arizona in 2001 and Boston in 2004 and 2007.

    But Bonds and Clemens have been accused of using performance-enhancing drugs, and support for Schilling dropped after he made hateful remarks toward Muslims, transgender people, reporters and others. Bonds has denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs, and Clemens maintains he never used PEDs.

    Schilling got seven votes Sunday, and it’s possible a future committee may swing in his favor. For Bonds and Clemens, that now seems unlikely.

    There was a thought that maybe Bonds and Clemens would get more sympathy from their peers than writers for their suspected steroid use during an era tarnished by the stain of PEDs. That clearly wasn’t the case.

    This year’s contemporary committee included Hall of Famers Greg Maddux, Jack Morris, Ryne Sandberg, Lee Smith, Frank Thomas and Alan Trammell, plus executives Paul Beeston, Arte Moreno, Kim Ng, Theo Epstein, Dave St. Peter, Derrick Hall and Ken Williams; and media members Steve Hirdt, LaVelle Neal and Susan Slusser. Chipper Jones was supposed to be on the committee but missed Sunday’s vote due to COVID-19. He was replaced by Hall.

    The Hall of Fame did not reveal all down-ballot totals, saying only that Bonds and Clemens received fewer than four votes — a strong indication that unless new evidence exonerates them from PED charges, they might never get their day in Cooperstown.

    ———

    Follow Jay Cohen at https://twitter.com/jcohenap

    ———

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

    Source link