Photo credit: Tage Olsin
I've wanted to comment on this and finally found the time. As Don Van Natta reported on May 13, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred removed "Pete Rose, 'Shoeless' Joe Jackson and other deceased players from Major League Baseball's permanently ineligible list." Manfred decided that "permanent" meant lifetime, not forever, and the relevance is that the Baseball Hall of Fame, a separate entity from Major League Baseball, had a rule since 1991 denying anyone on the permanently ineligible list from being inducted.
This rule was chiefly directed at Rose. Before 1991, other ineligible players, like Jackson, had been eligible for the Hall but were never inducted. Eight were banned from Baseball in 1921 after the 1919 World Series-fixing scandal. Along with Jackson, two others might have finished with Hall of Fame-worthy careers.
Pitcher Eddie Cicotte won 209 games with a .585 win percentage over 14 years (1905, 1908-20). According to Stathead, he was sixth in wins over the 1905-20 span and, among players with at least 150 wins, tenth in ERA. He was not, however, nearly as dominant as some of the legends of the era, like Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson, and Grover Cleveland Alexander.
Buck Weaver, a switch-hitting shortstop and third baseman, played only nine seasons; ten are required for inclusion into the Hall of Fame. His last four seasons demonstrate that he was becoming a good hitter, and probably very good for his position. If he hadn't been suspended and played until 1930, he may have finished with 2600-2700 hits, perhaps finishing 21st to 13th on the career list at the time.
Without the permanent ban, Shoeless Joe Jackson would have made the Hall of Fame at some point. In 1920, his last season before the ban, he had the second-best batting average and third-best OPS (on-base % plus slugging %) of all time. If he had played several more years, these averages would have likely declined as he moved past his prime, but he would have ranked much higher in quantity measures like career hits.
Nevertheless, Jackson's violation of the rules was far more egregious than Rose's. He accepted money to help throw the World Series. Perhaps he didn't actually throw it; the stat line indicates that Jackson played well. At the very least, however, Jackson received a bribe to keep his mouth shut while some teammates intentionally played poorly. At best, Jackson participated in fraud.
Rose was found to have bet on baseball games during his post-playing career as a manager, which is a no-no, and bet on games involving his own team, which is even worse. It's true that when he bet on his Reds, it was always on them to win, but the very act of doing so was compromising and sent signals to others. What if he bet on his team one night but not the following night? How would his betting have influenced his personnel moves regarding the starter rotation and relief pitching?
Rose's conduct was explicitly prohibited, and his lifetime ban was warranted. However, it's also true that when people watched a Rose-managed Reds game, they could expect the Reds to be trying to win. Rose opened himself up to possibly being compromised, which is far from the same thing as participating in fixing the World Series.
Jackson's conduct as a player damaged the integrity of the game; why would the Hall of Fame enshrine someone who did that? Pete Rose's misconduct as a manager was serious, but not close to the same level of severity.
The Baseball Writers of America typically selects players eligible for the Hall of Fame, and they can remain on the ballot for ten years. After that, Hall of Fame historical committees may take a turn on candidates. Rose's candidacy, however, will bypass the BBWAA and go to the Historical Overview Committee and the Classic Baseball Era Committee. According to the Hall's rules, Rose can't even be considered until December 2027.
I agree with Bob Costas, who told John Ziegler (beginning around 131:31) that Jackson had been considered by the Baseball Writers Association of America twice, once in the 1930s and once in the 1940s, and got little to no support. Costas thinks the BBWAA should also consider Rose because it never had the chance to vote on him.
In any case, I agree with what Commissioner Manfred did. Before Manfred lifted the permanent ban, I could never put my finger on exactly why I didn't want Rose inducted into the Hall. Rose wouldn't admit wrongdoing for many years, and even after he did, he made no lifestyle changes that would indicate he could be trusted to work in baseball again. But his on-field accomplishments warranted induction.
Manfred's action clarified my thinking.
For me, it comes down to this: while Rose belongs in the Hall of Fame as a player, he didn't deserve to personally receive the honor. He didn't deserve the applause. He didn't deserve the chance to stand at a podium and make a speech at the Hall. And he didn't deserve the opportunity to market himself as a Hall of Famer for economic purposes.
Rose deserved a lifetime ban from both MLB and the Hall of Fame, but not a permanent ban from the Hall of Fame.
Now that Rose has passed on, perhaps it is appropriate to remember his unprecedented achievements as a player, when he was a great ambassador for the game. I'm glad the Hall of Fame will someday decide, one way or another.
On a related note, I've seen some reaction that Rose deserves the Hall because MLB's relationship with gambling has changed, and society is now more tolerant of gambling. That's a ridiculous argument. It's true that sports betting has become legal in more places, making it less connected to mobsters. It's also true that MLB once went to extreme lengths to disassociate itself from gambling of any kind, while now it's comfortable with fans betting on games. However, the same rules of integrity remain as they've always been: if you work in the Major Leagues, you can't bet on baseball.
Imagine 70 years ago, an unmarried professor working at a Christian college had a sexual affair with an unmarried, 18-year-old student. Let's say he was brilliant and had a sterling reputation, but when the affair was discovered, he was fired and, disgraced, never found work in academia again.
Let's say this Christian college has since become more liberal and secular. Can you imagine its current administration saying, "Well, sexual mores have changed, and pre-marital sex among consenting adults is tolerated in this institution and widely accepted in the broader society. Therefore, in retrospect, we were wrong to fire this professor."
Wouldn't that sound absurd? It's evident that the changing mores had nothing to do with it; the problem was the classroom's integrity and the teacher-student relationship. It wasn't a matter of sexual morality, but of ethics.
Likewise, the changing relationship of society toward gambling has nothing to do with the Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson cases. Ultimately, it wasn't about the gambling; it was about ethics.
And in my opinion, Jackson's breach was much greater than Rose's. Jackson doesn't belong in the Hall. Rose, finally, does.
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