Permanently ineligible.
For nearly 36 years, every Commissioner had said nothing would change for Pete Rose. For far longer, nothing was allowed to change for the members of the Chicago Black Sox scandal. That all changed this morning.
On an unsuspecting Tuesday morning in May, Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred made a decision that may forever shift the moral compass of America’s pastime. In an unprecedented move, MLB announced it has formally removed 16 deceased individuals, including two of the most infamous names in baseball history, Pete Rose and “Shoeless” Joe Jackson, from its permanently ineligible list. The ban, long seen as the sport’s harshest penalty, has been not-so-quietly redefined: death, it seems, now marks the end of that punishment.
For some, this announcement brings long-awaited redemption. For others, it’s a symbolic unraveling of baseball’s ironclad code of integrity. And for all of us, it reopens one of the most polarizing conversations in sports: what do we do with greatness tainted by disgrace?
Why It Matters
Manfred defended the ruling on pragmatic grounds, explaining that the purpose of the permanently ineligible list is to protect the sport from ongoing threats. “Once someone has passed away, they no longer present a risk to the game’s integrity,” Manfred stated in a formal release. It seems to be a clean-cut argument. And one that separates disciplinary enforcement from legacy evaluation.
Rose, who was banned in 1989 after an investigation revealed he bet on games while managing the Cincinnati Reds, has long been the face of baseball’s harshest justice. His on-field achievements are undeniable: 4,256 hits, three World Series rings, 17 All-Star appearances, and a style of play so gritty it earned him the nickname “Charlie Hustle.” But none of it has earned him a plaque in Cooperstown.
“Shoeless” Joe Jackson’s story is even murkier. Accused of conspiring to throw the 1919 World Series as part of the infamous “Black Sox” scandal, Jackson maintained his innocence until his death in 1951. His .375 batting average during that Series only fueled the doubts. To this day, Jackson’s accomplishments remain stained by the accusations, and his legacy was sealed behind a wall of suspicion.
Now, with their bans lifted, the Baseball Hall of Fame is no longer barred from considering them. As early as December 2027, the Classic Baseball Era Committee could potentially formally enshrine these players, some long after their deaths, into baseball’s pantheon.
Redemption for MLB?
For those who support the decision, this is more than a bureaucratic update, it’s a long-overdue act of decency. Many argue that the Hall of Fame is there to tell the story of baseball, not litigate or moralize the game. You quite literally can’t write the history of baseball without including players like Pete Rose or ‘Shoeless’ Joe. Omitting them would be akin to not telling your parents that you failed because you didn’t study.
Okay, maybe that’s not a close analogy at all. But you get the point. Leaving these two legends out of the history of the game is a slight that is not easily overlooked.
Fans who were raised on the modern game, an era tainted by performance-enhancing drugs and corporate partnerships with betting outlets across sports, may be better suited to overlook the gambling by Rose and others. And in Jackson’s case, the ambiguity of his guilt has always been a source of both sorrow and outrage. To many, these men were punished too harshly, too permanently, and for too long.
This change, then, is a gesture of respect to the complexity of history. It suggests that greatness should be remembered, even if it is flawed. That a man’s contribution to a game can be meaningful, even if his choices were not.
The Case for Caution
But for critics, the issue is not whether these players were great. It’s whether they honored the game while wearing the uniform. The permanent ban was never just about retribution—it was about deterrence. It was about telling every player, coach, and executive that no one is above the sanctity of the game.
If death nullifies that message, does the punishment lose its teeth? John Dowd, author of the 1989 Rose report, thinks so. “This sets a dangerous precedent,” he warned Tuesday. “We’re essentially saying the rules don’t really last forever—they expire, like milk in the fridge.”
And what of the Hall of Fame? It has long insisted on maintaining a moral standard, enshrining not just talent but character. If Jackson and Rose are inducted, what happens to other banned players—or even current ones who violate modern policies?
Furthermore, there’s the question of fairness. Many players toed the line, resisted temptations, and played clean. Are we now elevating those who didn’t, simply because their crimes aged into sentiment?
Where Does the Game Go From Here?
MLB has cracked open the door to reconsideration, but it hasn’t thrown it wide. The Hall still must vote. Committees still must debate. And the court of public opinion will no doubt remain divided.
But make no mistake: this is a turning point. In lifting the veil of banishment from Rose, Jackson, and others, baseball is not just revisiting old ghosts—it’s redefining its relationship with history, punishment, and legacy.
Whether you see it as justice served or tradition betrayed, the question remains:
In the game of baseball, how do we balance greatness with guilt?
You decide.