Reds celebrate 'Pete Rose Night' after MLB all-time hits leader's removal from ineligible list
Pete Rose is off the MLB ineligible list and permitted for Hall of Fame consideration. The Cincinnati Reds are taking advantage of the moment.
As luck would have it, the Reds already had "Pete Rose Night" scheduled for Wednesday, one day after MLB commissioner Rob Manfred announced he was removing Rose and 15 other deceased ball players from MLB's permanently ineligible list. The decision opens the door for Rose to get his first shot at the Hall of Fame in December 2027.
It's unclear how much the Reds already had planned to honor MLB's all-time hits leader, but it can't be denied that they went all-out Wednesday, with special No. 14 warm-up shirts and a three-minute tribute video before their game against the Chicago White Sox.
Repping 1⃣4⃣ in warmups 🌹 pic.twitter.com/YJR5Lx0JWD
— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) May 14, 2025
All fans in attendance received a free replica road Rose jersey, and the fans gave a standing ovation pregame to honor the late ballplayer.
A standing ovation and 'Pete' chants at Great American Ball Park on Pete Rose night. #Reds @FOX19 pic.twitter.com/uaZfsDMJdb
— Gabi Sorrentino (@GSorrentinoTV) May 14, 2025
The Reds shared images of a large display of red roses around Rose's statue at Great American Ball Park.
🌹🌹🌹🌹 pic.twitter.com/zzzYR6JLuc
— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) May 14, 2025
Earlier in the day, they dedicated Rose's childhood baseball field as Pete Rose Field.
The West Side Cincinnati field where Pete learned to play baseball was renamed Pete Rose Field today! pic.twitter.com/37EBcFh88S
— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) May 14, 2025
The Reds retired Rose's No. 14 with MLB's blessing in 2016, as part of a softening relationship between the league and player during the later years of Rose's life. He lived much of his retired life as a baseball pariah, spending much of his time in casinos and at autograph conventions.
Wednesday saw a full reversal of that status, with thousands of fans cheering for the man who accepted a permanent ban from the game in 1989 in the face of overwhelming evidence that he bet on the Reds while managing them in the late 1980s, then had his legacy further clouded by a tax evasion conviction and statutory rape allegations.
Manfred's decision was largely treated as a vindication for Rose's legacy, with the commissioner presenting it as a merciful act eight months after the man's death (and two months after President Donald Trump made very clear he wanted it done). The next step for Rose would be Cooperstown enshrinement, though it's still unclear how that side of the equation will work out.
When discussing how Rose's removal from the ineligible list clears the way for him to enter the Hall of Fame, it's important to remember he was off the ballot because the Hall of Fame unanimously voted for a rule to explicitly ban ineligible-list players right before his turn was to come up.
The Hall of Fame did not want to make a plaque for Rose in 1991, and Rose's current candidacy entirely depends on how much that stance has softened among the 16-member Classic Baseball Era Committee.
Rose certainly did nothing to help himself while he was out of the sport, as he missed his best chance to come off the ineligible list when Bud Selig made him an offer reportedly contingent on his coming clean. Rose did finally admit to betting on baseball as Reds manager in 2004 and even started apologizing a few years later, but there is physical evidence that he went to his grave lying about making bets as a player.
And that's just the matter of Rose's betting. There's also the fact that one of his bats, used in 1985 while he was in pursuit of Ty Cobb's hits record, was found to contain telltale signs of corking in 2010, with another guy later coming forward to say he did bat-corking for Rose.
Then there are the truly heinous allegations raised by former Rose investigator John Dowd. Dowd alleged in a 2015 interview that Rose committed statutory rape with 12-to-14-year-old girls provided by a memorabilia dealer at spring training in the 1970s, when Rose was a married father of two in his 30s.
Rose sued for defamation, and Dowd's legal team responded with a sworn statement from a woman who said she had a consensual relationship with Rose in Ohio when she was younger than 16 years old. That fallout saw Rose fired from his job at Fox Sports, and the defamation lawsuit was later dismissed with prejudice after the two sides reached an agreement. Years later, Rose didn't deny the allegations so much as express annoyance that they were brought up.
For years, Rose's case has been presented as a matter of how much grace MLB was willing to give him, but his being eligible for the Hall of Fame could mean reckoning with some aspects of his character that came to light well after his ban. Going forward, a certain 12 out of 16 people will need to be convinced that he really is worthy of the Hall of Fame.

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