I just heard on the "Mike and Mike" show (terrible show-but one of
those I scan through duriing work commute) that Bud Selig has refused
to reinstate Pete Rose once again, and that next year is the last year
he can be reinstated. Thus, if that doesn't happen, the only way Rose
can ever get into the Hall of Fame is through the Veterans Committee.
Golic and "Greenie" (what an annoying idiot he is) said that it is well
known that Rose will never, ever get voted in by the Veterans
Committee. This story just keeps getting more remarkable. Here we have
the al-time Major League leader in hits, at bats and runs scored, and
he is not in the Hall of Fame. While scores of mediocre black players
have committed violent crimes, or had sex with underaged girls, or been
deeply involved with illegal drugs, Rose is persona non grata because
he gambled on baseball games. This case mirrors the nonsensical order
of priorities the leaders of Don King's America employ; violent crime
is less troubling than gambling. Even if Rose had bet against his own
team, which no one claims he did, that takes nothing away from his
accomplishments as a player.
We all know that this could never happen to a black superstar of Rose's
caliber. Not in a million years. There would have been outraged
speeches from the floor of Congress years ago. Jesse Jackson and Al
Sharpton would have called on a boycott of Major League Baseball until
its all-time hits leader was inducted into the Hall of Fame. Veterans
like Hank Aaron and Willie Mays would have been interviewed over and
over by the jock-sniiffing media about the gross injustice of all this.
Every one of the "journalists" who seem so unsympathetic towards Rose
would have editorialized on air, ad naseum, about how unfair the
situation was. If it dragged on for any length of time (which it
wouldn't), President Bush would address the nation about the gravitiy
of the situation. Above all else, race and racism would be mentioned
every single time the issue was discussed. IMHO, no other case points
out the disparity in treatment white and black athletes are subject to,
both legally and culturally. Think of it this way; two players from the
Big Red Machine- Tony Perez and Joe Morgan, are in the Hall of Fame,
while the most accomplished player from that same team is not. Perez
and Morgan epitomize the slew of undeserving modern players inducted
into the Hall of Fame for no good reason. It is a complete joke that
the player with more hits than anyone else who ever played the game is
not in the Hall of Fame.
those I scan through duriing work commute) that Bud Selig has refused
to reinstate Pete Rose once again, and that next year is the last year
he can be reinstated. Thus, if that doesn't happen, the only way Rose
can ever get into the Hall of Fame is through the Veterans Committee.
Golic and "Greenie" (what an annoying idiot he is) said that it is well
known that Rose will never, ever get voted in by the Veterans
Committee. This story just keeps getting more remarkable. Here we have
the al-time Major League leader in hits, at bats and runs scored, and
he is not in the Hall of Fame. While scores of mediocre black players
have committed violent crimes, or had sex with underaged girls, or been
deeply involved with illegal drugs, Rose is persona non grata because
he gambled on baseball games. This case mirrors the nonsensical order
of priorities the leaders of Don King's America employ; violent crime
is less troubling than gambling. Even if Rose had bet against his own
team, which no one claims he did, that takes nothing away from his
accomplishments as a player.
We all know that this could never happen to a black superstar of Rose's
caliber. Not in a million years. There would have been outraged
speeches from the floor of Congress years ago. Jesse Jackson and Al
Sharpton would have called on a boycott of Major League Baseball until
its all-time hits leader was inducted into the Hall of Fame. Veterans
like Hank Aaron and Willie Mays would have been interviewed over and
over by the jock-sniiffing media about the gross injustice of all this.
Every one of the "journalists" who seem so unsympathetic towards Rose
would have editorialized on air, ad naseum, about how unfair the
situation was. If it dragged on for any length of time (which it
wouldn't), President Bush would address the nation about the gravitiy
of the situation. Above all else, race and racism would be mentioned
every single time the issue was discussed. IMHO, no other case points
out the disparity in treatment white and black athletes are subject to,
both legally and culturally. Think of it this way; two players from the
Big Red Machine- Tony Perez and Joe Morgan, are in the Hall of Fame,
while the most accomplished player from that same team is not. Perez
and Morgan epitomize the slew of undeserving modern players inducted
into the Hall of Fame for no good reason. It is a complete joke that
the player with more hits than anyone else who ever played the game is
not in the Hall of Fame.