Hustling Facts About Pete Rose, Baseball’s Bad Boy


A Late-Career Fumble

The Cincinnati Reds took a chance on Pete Rose, and it paid off. He became one of their greatest players and, indeed, one of the best that the sport of baseball has ever seen. But in his later career, Rose’s greed got the better of him and he sullied what could have been a golden record.

 

1. He Was A Hometown Hero

Pete Edward Rose was born on April 14, 1941, in Cincinnati, Ohio, meaning he eventually made waves with his hometown team. Ohio had always been a sports-crazy state, and Rose’s parents fit right in: they enthusiastically supported their son’s participation in any and all sports. And while Rose dipped his toe in baseball as a kid, it wasn’t his first love.

 Gary Gershoff, Getty Images

2. He Started In Another Game

By the time he hit high school, sports were Rose’s life, and he was determined to make a name for himself at Western Hills High. Despite his small stature for his age, Rose earned the starting running back position on the school football team in his freshman year. But his success wouldn’t last.

 Metate yearbook of Pomona College, Wikimedia Commons

3. He Got Rejected

Once sophomore year rolled around, the good times ceased to roll for young Rose. He failed to get promoted to the varsity football team, which crushed him. Rose reportedly lost all interest in his studies, such was his disappointment, and he ended up repeating his sophomore year. It was time to take another path.

 Jayne Kamin, Los Angeles Times, Wikimedia Commons

4. He Tried Again

By 1960, Rose had pivoted his focus exclusively to baseball. He joined the Dayton Amateur League team, and he showed his versatility early on, playing in a variety of positions from catcher to shortstop. He also compiled a relatively impressive .626 batting average. That could have been where Rose peaked, if not for a little nepotism.

 Bruce Sanchez, Unsplash

5. He Was A Nepo Baby

It just so happened that Rose’s uncle, Buddy Bloebaum, was a scout for the Cincinnati Reds. Impressed with his nephew’s ability, and with the Reds in a relatively precarious position after recently trading some talented players, Bloebaum convinced the franchise to take a chance on Rose. It set him up well right out of school.

 Blake Bolinger from Central NJ, United States, Wikimedia Commons

6. He Got Signed

Rose signed a professional contract with the Reds right as he graduated high school in 1960. His signing payment was $7,000; not a crazy amount, but good enough for a young man entering the working world. For the first few years, however, he had to grind away on a minor league team affiliated with the Reds. But with a stroke of luck, he would get his big shot.

 Focus On Sport, Getty Images

7. He Got A Shot

In spring of 1963, the Reds’ regular second baseman pulled a muscle in his groin while playing a training game against the White Sox. That player’s misfortune was Rose’s luck: he got the call to play for the Reds, and he made the most of it. His work ethic even earned him his famous nickname.

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8. He Got A Moniker

Rose hit the ground running—quite literally. During a training game against the Yankees shortly after getting the call from the Reds, Rose drew what was a clear walk. But instead, the young rookie sprinted to first base, earning him the nickname “Charlie Hustle”. It was meant to be derisive, but Rose wore the name with honor. 

This isn't the only version of the story, however.

 Focus On Sport, Getty Images

9. He Tried To Climb

An alternate origin of the nickname was recounted in Ken Burns’ famous documentary about the eponymous game, Baseball. In it, Rose’s teammate and best friend, Mickey Mantle, claims Rose earned the nickname after an incident in which he tried to climb a fence to catch a Mantle home run. Whichever story is true, Charlie Hustle was clearly major league material.

 Focus On Sport, Getty Images

10. He Played The Big Leagues

Rose made his Major League debut on April 8, 1963, in a home game against the Pittsburgh Pirates. He showed signs of promise, drawing a walk in his first plate appearance, but his first few games were generally shaky. By the end of the season, however, he would turn that around dramatically.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

11. He Received Early Accolades

Rose’s season ended up being a heater. He finished having hit .273 for the year, and he impressed the Reds’ fans. The National League was impressed too, and the young protégé won the Rookie of the Year Award with 17 of 20 votes. Rose was off to a great start, but something else was calling to him.

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12. He Answered The Call

After the 1963 season, Rose felt inspired to do his patriotic duty and signed up for the United States Army Reserves. The conflict in Vietnam was heating up, and perhaps Rose wanted to get ahead of the draft. He got assigned to Fort Knox, where they quickly made use of his skills.

 Starscream, Wikimedia Commons

13. He Passed On His Wisdom

Serving as a platoon guide on paper, Rose quickly fell into a role at Fort Knox far better suited to his skills: he helped to train the Fort’s baseball team. Indeed, the Reserves were quite accommodating with Rose’s budding career: upon transferring to Fort Thomas back in Ohio, Rose got the job of company cook, a role that involved early starts, so that he could leave in time to play Reds home games. His time away made him rusty, though.

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14. He Fled In Shame

When Rose returned for the 1964 season, he was not in the same shape he had finished last season in. So bad was his slump that the Reds benched him in the late-season, and he finished with a dismal .269 average. But Charlie Hustle would not give up that easily: incredibly, he spent the offseason playing in Venezuela to improve his game. It paid off in droves.

 Bpluke01, Wikimedia Commons

15. He Came Back Hard

Rose’s time in exile did him a world of good, and he came roaring back to form for the 1965 season with the Reds. By year’s end, he led the league in hits and at-bats, with 209 and 670 respectively. He finished sixth in the NL MVP balloting, an incredible placement for a player as inexperienced as he was. The next few seasons followed suit, and as Rose made a name for himself, he also needed to make an image.

 Cincinnati Reds, Wikimedia Commons

16. He Had A Look

Rose’s star rose continuously throughout the 1960s, and by the time the ‘70s rolled around, he was one of baseball's biggest names. During a Championship Series game against the Mets at the end of the season, Rose debuted his now-famous bowl haircut, replacing his previously reliable crewcut. Perhaps he thought he needed a look ahead of the biggest night of his life.

 Focus On Sport, Getty Images

17. He Won The Top Prize

With the Big Red Machine, Rose reached the highest rung of the baseball ladder—not once, but twice. In 1975 and 1976, the Cincinnati Reds won two consecutive World Series titles. And though he would not win it again with the Reds, Rose wasn’t finished setting records with them.

 W.marsh, Wikimedia Commons

18. He Had The Run Of His Life

Later that year, on June 14, 1978, in a seemingly unnoteworthy game, Rose singled in the first inning against the Cubs. The hit, however, turned out to be the start of a stunning run, where Rose hit in every game he played until August 1, an astonishing 44-game streak. The run whipped up a media frenzy, with Rose unsuccessfully trying to beat Joe DiMaggio’s 56-hit record. He didn’t get there in the end, and it may have signaled to Rose that it was time to move on.

 Annie Spratt, Unsplash

19. He Made A Big Move

During Rose’s tenure with the Reds, the Philadelphia Phillies had a pretty impressive team too, making the National League East three years in a row. However, they couldn’t quite make it to the World Series. They needed someone like Charlie Hustle. In 1979, with Rose as a free agent, the Phillies signed him to a four-year, $3.2 million contract, making him the highest-paid athlete in team sports. It was a good bet.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

20. He Brought More Glory

Rose’s impact on the Phillies was astounding. Over the next four years, the team earned three division titles and made it to the World Series, finally winning the title in 1980, making it Rose’s third. But what goes up must come down…

 Bettmann, Getty Images

21. He Had A Major Slump

1983 marked the worst season of Rose’s career. Despite making it to a second World Series appearance with the Phillies (which they lost), the aging Rose batted only .245 with 121 hits. By the end of the season, the manager benched him. It may have had something to do with his troubled home life.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

22. He Had Different Baby Mamas

Rose had gotten married way back in 1964, and his wife, Karolyn, had stuck with him throughout his meteoric rise. He hadn’t afforded her the same courtesy, however. After the couple’s two children were born, a paternity suit was filed in 1978 that named Rose as the father of a girl he conceived out of wedlock. The suit wasn’t settled until 1996, when Rose finally acknowledged the girl was his child. But his personal life had already started to unravel.

 Focus On Sport, Getty Images

23. He Was Unfaithful

Fathering an illegitimate child was not Rose’s only instance of infidelity. The baseball star constantly womanized, and combined with his inattentive relationship with his family, his wife had enough. Karolyn divorced Rose in 1980. Perhaps the fallout forced Rose into a sort of self-exile.

 Kjunstorm from Laguna Niguel, CA, US, Wikimedia Commons

24. He Went Up North

The Phillies granted Rose an unconditional release in late-1983. Rose, seeking an easier place to spend the twilight of his career, ended up in the Great White North, signing a one-year contract with the Montreal Expos. But in his heart, Charlie Hustle longed for home.

 Nems, Wikimedia Commons

25. He Had A Homecoming

A year later, in August of 1984, Rose got an opportunity to return to his beloved Reds, and he did so enthusiastically. The Expos traded him back to Ohio, and upon his return, the team named Rose player-manager. He quickly took to his new role, and his career seemed to have found the foothold he was searching for.

 Ron Vesely, Getty Images

26. He Quietly Retired

On November 11, 1986, Rose ceded his place on the Reds’ 40-man roster to allow room for newly signed pitcher Pat Pacillo. This marked Charlie Hustle’s unofficial retirement as a baseball player. Rose had found a latter-years role that really fit him. And he seemed to have done that at home too, for now.

 Broder Type / New Reds Machine / Cincinnati Reds, Wikimedia Commons

27. He Had A Type

Rose married his second wife, Carol, in 1984. Carol had previously worked as a Playboy Bunny and a cheerleader for the Philadelphia Eagles. The couple would not divorce until 2011, after which Rosestarted dating yet another Playboy Bunny—though this one, disturbingly, was 40 years younger than him. But Rose’s troubles started long before that. 

 Polk Imaging, Getty Images

28. He Got In A Scrap

Rose racked up an impressive win record as manager of the Reds too. However, four years into his stint, trouble arose. During a home game against the Mets on April 30, 1988, umpire Dave Pallone made a controversial decision against the Reds. This incensed Rose, and he confronted Pallone on the field. The argument escalated and ended with Rose shoving the umpire, which was grounds for immediate ejection from the game. The consequences were devastating.

 KeithJJ, Pixabay

29. He Got Severely Punished

The scene caused an outrage among Reds fans, who immediately began pelting the field with objects from the stands. The scandal caused the NL president to suspend Rose for 30 days, to this day the longest suspension ever given to a manager for an on-field occurrence. But things were about to go from bad to worse.

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30. He Slipped Up

In 1989, several betting slips were found in an Ohio restaurant, and they were signed by Charlie Hustle himself. The restaurant’s owner, Ron Peters, and a friend of his, Paul Janszen, later admitted they had run bets for Rose, and on his very own sport of baseball, nonetheless. Scandalously, Janszen even claimed Rose would signal bets to him from the dugout as games progressed. The League took notice.

 Tony Bock, Getty Images

31. He Came Under Investigation

Within weeks, rumors intensified that Rose was betting on baseball, a practice that was strictly forbidden for players and managers. The Commissioner of Baseball launched an official investigation. Rose vehemently denied the allegations, but shortly afterwards, Sports Illustrated published a detailed report of the recovered betting slips that did not look good for Rose. The vultures were circling.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

32. He Lost Big

The Commissioner’s investigation turned up some shocking claims about Rose’s conduct, much of it detailed by Paul Janszen. Rose’s gambling network was astonishingly large: Janszen even claimed he lost $450,000 within the space of three months from betting alone. The manager even considered throwing games if the potential payout was high enough. The disgraced star had nowhere else to turn.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

33. He Gave Up His Place

As the official investigation tightened on Rose, his options started running out. On August 24, 1989, in return for the MLB making no formal finding on the gambling allegations, Rose voluntarily agreed to a permanent place on baseball’s ineligible list. It was a low point for the once great superstar and would permanently stain his career.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

34. He Got No More Glory

While the Baseball Hall of Fame had always had an informal rule to exclude players from the ineligible list, they formally codified the position on February 4, 1991. Devastatingly for Rose, this meant that, despite his status as one of the all-time greats, he would never enter the Hall of Fame. But the implications of his actions were even more devastating than that.

 Kenneth C. Zirkel, Wikimedia Commons

35. He Lost All Integrity

Rose’s gambling became a national scandal, and it was harshly criticized by players and fans alike as an attack on the integrity of the game and American values at large. His punishment was more than just for simple rule breaking; Rose was disciplined for a moral failing. But Rose’s moral failures weren’t over yet.

 Ayingling, Wikimedia Commons

36. He Got In More Trouble

Rose’s wrongdoing continued to haunt him after his suspension. On April 20, 1990, he pleaded guilty to two charges of tax evasion—he had failed to report his income from selling signed memorabilia. Rose was sentenced to five months in a minimum-security prison, fined $50,000, and given 1000 hours of community service. The bad times would continue for a long time.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

37. He Spun Out For A While

Rose’s troubles apparently lasted well beyond the ‘90s. In 2011, after the dissolution of his second marriage, a TMZ report detailed the dark place Rose found himself in. He was allegedly still involved in high stakes gambling and had reportedly accrued massive debts with casinos and the IRS. Luckily, he had baseball to return to from time to time.

 John M. Heller, Getty Images

38. He Was Given Temporary Reprieve

In 1999, fans voted on a shortlist of the 100 greatest players of the century, and Rose was selected as an outfielder for the MLB’s All-Century Team. Mercifully, the League gave Rose an exception from his ban to take part in the pre-game introduction of the team at the 1999 World Series. Rose received a massive ovation from fans and fellow players alike. But he still hadn’t owned up to his mistakes.

 DON EMMERT, Getty Images

39. He Penned A Confession

In the entire time since his 1989 ban, Rose never publicly admitted to the alleged misconduct. However, in 2004, Rose published his autobiography, titled My Prison Without Bars, where he finally admitted to gambling on baseball while playing for and managing the Cincinnati Reds. With that weight off, the retired player embarked on something of a passive apology tour.

 TIMOTHY A. CLARY, Getty Images

40. He Apologized To Fans

After publishing his book, Rose became a fixture at baseball card conventions. Humorously, and touchingly, he became known for signing fans’ baseballs with the phrase “I'm sorry I bet on baseball”. It was clear he was feeling a lot of remorse.

 Paula R. Lively from Zanesville, United States, Wikimedia Commons

41. He Turned On The Waterworks

In 2010, on the 25th anniversary of his 4,192nd hit, Rose’s former teammates held a roast of the former player in a casino in Indiana. What was supposed to be a lighthearted affair, however, soon took a tonal shift when Rose began weeping openly at the mention of his gambling allegations. Acknowledging that he had “disrespected baseball”, he apologized to his teammates and fans alike. Rose was clearly remorseful, although it may have been part of a broader campaign…

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42. He Wanted Back In

From the moment of his placement on the ineligible list, Rose continually petitioned for his reinstatement. Even by the 2020s, after some other scandals in the world of baseball that, in Rose’s view, dwarfed his own, he kept trying. He also requested the Baseball Hall of Fame repeal their ban on ineligible players. None of it came to fruition, and Rose had to seek glory elsewhere.

 HENNY RAY ABRAMS, Getty Images

43. He Appeared In The Ring

From 1998 onwards, Rose made numerous appearances at World Wrestling Entertainment events. Over the years, he guested as a ring announcer and a host, and even had a staged, onscreen feud with wrestler Kane (known, like Rose’s Cincinnati team, as “The Big Red Machine”). Despite his exile from baseball, Rose never broke ties with his beloved team.

 Krystal Bogner from Adelaide, Australia, Wikimedia Commons

44. He Got His Wish…Kind Of

Though his numerous petitions to the Baseball Hall of Fame failed, Rose got his name on one such list, at least. In 2016, he was inducted into the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame. Despite all his scandals, the Reds’ love and appreciation for Charlie Hustle never really wavered.

 Mark Lyons, Getty Images

45. His Jersey Was Hung In The Rafters

The Reds did not stop at inducting Rose into their Hall of Fame. Bestowing upon him the ultimate honor for any sportsman, they also permanently retired Rose’s number 14 jersey. This required approval by the MLB, a possible sign of a softening position on their part. We’ll never really know, though, because scandal reared its head once again.

 Arturo Pardavila III from Hoboken, NJ, USA, Wikimedia Commons

46. He Faced A Troubling Allegation

Later that year, a sworn statement was filed in a court case by an unnamed woman that claimed Rose engaged in an intimate relationship with her when she was a teenager and he was in his 30s. Rose acknowledged the relationship, claiming he believed the woman was over the age of consent in Ohio at the time (which was 16).

Rose reached a settlement with the parties outside of court. When later questioned on the allegation by a female reporter in 2022, Rose arrogantly and insensitively dismissed the issue, stating “It was 55 years ago, babe”. But Rose would not live to face any harsher consequences.

 Super Festivals from Ft. Lauderdale, USA, Wikimedia Commons

47. His Ticker Took Him Out

On September 30, 2024, the day after attending an autograph signing event, Rose succumbed to hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in his Las Vegas home. He was 83 years old. Shortly afterwards, the Reds announced they would play the remainder of their season with #14 patches on their uniforms in Charlie Hustle’s honor. Another significant figure chimed in too.

 Phillip Faraone, Getty Images

48. He Had A Presidential Fan

On February 28, 2025, about a month after being inaugurated for his second term, US President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that he would give Rose, of whom the President was apparently a big fan, a posthumous pardon. It wasn’t clear what crimes Trump was pardoning the late athlete for, but he also took the time to criticize the MLB’s decision to ban Rose. The President had some sway, of course.

 Variety, Getty Images

49. His Demise Forced Change

On May 13, 2025, after increased pressure from Trump, MLB Commissioner Rob Manford announced a new policy where all ineligibility bans would expire after the holder’s demise. For Rose and his remaining family, this meant only one thing…

 Arturo Pardavila III from Hoboken, NJ, USA, Wikimedia Commons

50. He Has A Posthumous Shot

Though no longer among the living, Rose’s reinstatement now means that he is eligible for his long-coveted spot in the Baseball Hall of Fame. The next voting is set to take place in 2027. His renewed eligibility and its implications sparked much debate within the baseball community. But for Charlie Hustle, none of that matters any longer—though he may rest a little easier knowing he has another shot.

 Bettmann, Getty Images

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