Cincinnati.Com
NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Currently:
55°F
Mostly Sunny
Weather | Traffic
Reds
HOME
NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
REDS
BENGALS
LOCAL GUIDE
MULTIMEDIA
ARCHIVES
SEARCH
CINCINNATI REDS 
Schedule 
TV Schedule 
Game Logs 
Roster 

Reds News 
MLB News 
NL Game Capsules 
AL Game Capsules 
NL Standings 
AL Standings 

Marge Schott 
Great American 
Cinergy Field 
Joe Nuxhall 
Pete Rose 
Borgman Cartoons 
Photo Galleries 
Wallpaper 



 
Sunday, December 15, 2002

Second chances are second nature in sports



By Jim Litke
The Associated Press

America forgave Richard Nixon, George Steinbrenner pardoned Billy Martin, and Marge Simpson let Homer back in the house at least a thousand times.

Second chances are second nature in sports. We're suckers for that kind of thing. So there's nothing unprecedented, unjust or even unexpected in baseball boss Bud Selig dangling a carrot under Pete Rose's nose. So long as the commissioner doesn't go overboard.

Rose doesn't deserve another shot at managing, a possibility he raised as recently as last summer. Whether he comes clean about his gambling problem is almost beside the point. Every bad call would invite the kind of scrutiny Rose could never outrun.

But he does belong in the Hall of Fame. It should be enough that Rose is baseball's career hits leader and that he collected them all during one of the game's golden ages, but there's plenty more.

Just recall the fuss made in recent years when Cal Ripken, Tony Gwynn, Wade Boggs, Robin Yount and George Brett crashed the 3,000-hit barrier near the end of sensational careers. Now consider that each would have needed another eight to 10 sensational seasons just to gain admission to Rose's neighborhood.

Of course, none of them bet on baseball. And while Rose continues to insist he didn't, either, while managing the Cincinnati Reds, that's been the sticking point ever since Selig's predecessor, the late Bart Giamatti, announced the lifetime ban 13 years ago. Nothing Rose has done since has been reason to lower the bar.

He went on TV the same night he was kicked out of the game and started selling autographed baseballs for $39 each. Rose is still selling everything he can get his hands on.

In that sense, the only thing that's changed is the number and influence of the people willing to trade on Rose's notoriety. It used to be that his strongest advocates were former teammates, a player like Joe Morgan, asking for nothing more than a review. Now it's people like Cincinnati Mayor Charlie Luken. He wants Rose not just to be reinstated, but reinstated in time to make April's opening of the Great American Ball Park, the Reds' new home. How noble is that?

"Whatever the crime, time has been served," Luken wrote in one of two letters he sent Selig last month. "Whatever agreements were signed years ago are irrelevant today."

The sad truth is that fans have short memories. Major league baseball has lined its own pockets and allowed Rose to set foot on a diamond twice during sanctioned events. Both times, he's received the loudest ovations. As Luken's letter suggested, if you've actually done the time, most fans won't remember the crime.

But the responsibilities of those in charge of baseball should extend further than that. Rose's remarks from the day the ban went into effect have been an uninterrupted series of half-truths calculated to blur the facts.

Rose admitted to a gambling problem when he wanted sympathy and denied it when victimhood made it easier to move product. He used to set up a booth down the block from the Hall of Fame around the week of induction ceremonies and stage annual pity parties, slipping out of his sackcloth and ashes only long enough to ring up his customers' purchases.

Then, Rose called the evidence against him "incomplete" and his accusers "biased," and took great pleasure in pointing out that, "if I were a dope addict, my name would already be on a plaque down the street there."

What Rose conveniently left out was his run-ins with federal authorities punched holes in his credibility every bit as sharply as those singles he used to lash between infielders. Fans, though, always focused on the hits Rose made and not the ones he took.

Judging by the past, when the fan polls being conducted over the next few days are finished, something close to 75 percent of the voters will want Rose reinstated. If Selig allows him back on the ballot, the same margin from baseball writers would get Rose elected to the Hall.

There's nothing wrong with rehabilitation. Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis was once charged in a murder case and nowadays he delivers talks at NFL rookie orientation meetings about avoiding the wrong crowd.

A baseball executive speaking on the condition he not be identified told The Associated Press that Rose and Selig have been exchanging draft proposals about how much longer the ban will extend and how much Rose will be allowed to participate in the game if he is allowed back in. Final terms have yet to be negotiated, but here's one suggestion:

Let Rose talk to baseball's rookies about the evils of gambling, and get some time knocked off for good behavior.

---

Jim Litke is the national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke@ap.org




REDS / BASEBALL
All that's left of Cinergy is shell, memories
Managers back Rose's reinstatement
His baseball banishment is his cash cow
Second chances are second nature in sports
Griffey likely to stay with Reds
Reds Q&A
Cities interested in taking Expos contacted

BENGALS
Therapy could benefit Bengals
Draft: No.1 overall pick looms for Bengals
Jags, Bengals just want it to end
The Edge: Jaguars-Bengals
Isolation booth: Punt return
Key: Running game
Life as a Rookie
Bengals by the numbers

NFL
This week's NFL picks
McNair sits out final practice
Peppers, Portis, Shockey lead strong rookie group

XAVIER
No. 24 MSU 71, No. 13 Xavier 61
Rookie Finn a bright spot in Xavier loss

UC BEARCATS
UC 65, LaSalle 62
Mean Green's defense a problem for football 'Cats

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Palmer scores landslide Heisman victory
Dorsey says 'Canes got snubbed
Mt. Union a win from D-III title

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
After 87 wins, Terps lose at home
Butler 59, Miami 42
No. 21 Michigan State 71, No. 12 Kentucky 67
Ohio State 74, Morehead State 60
No. 7 Indiana 66, Purdue 63
Boothe powers XU women past Indiana St.

HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS
Have pity, not praise, for LeBron
Groeschen: 'Tis the season for wrestling's Classic
Schmidt: Who's best football team in Ky. history?
Mercy scores OT win
Fifth-ranked Reading knocked off by Versailles, 65-64
Wrestling: West's Flake definitely no fluke
High school swimming results

BOXING
Byrd denies Holyfield title

REGIONAL SPOTLITE
Five questions with David Baur
CBC's success inspired by a higher power
MU plays OSU at the Gardens

ANOTHER PERSPECTIVE
Enquirer's Page Two Power rankings
Beer and sports like popcorn and movies

Return to Reds front page...

Email this story to a friend


 
REDS NEWSLETTER
Subscribe to the Cincinnati.Com Reds Report.
Cincinnati.Com
Search our site by keyword:  

Search also: News | Jobs | Homes | Cars | Classifieds | Obits | Coupons | Events | Dining
Movies/DVDs | Video Games | Hotels | Golf | Visitor's Guide | Maps/Directions | Yellow Pages

  CINCINNATI.COM  |  NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Copyright 1995-2007. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies your agreement to the Terms of Service (updated December 19, 2002).