President Donald Trump
Rips ‘Lazy Ass’ MLB Over Pete Rose HOF
… Promises Full Pardon
Published
Opening Day remains to be a number of weeks away, however President Donald Trump threw one excessive and tight Friday evening … torching baseball for not enshrining the late legend Pete Rose in Cooperstown!
POTUS, an enormous baseball fan, unloaded on MLB management and HOF voters, blasting commish Rob Manfred (though not by title) and writers for maintaining the all-time hit chief out of the Hall, even in dying.
“Major League Baseball did not have the braveness or decency to place the late, nice, Pete Rose, also referred to as ‘Charlie Hustle,’ into the Baseball Hall of Fame,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“Now he’s lifeless, won’t ever expertise the joys of being chosen, though he was a FAR BETTER PLAYER than most who made it, and may solely be named posthumously. WHAT A SHAME!”
DT’s not incorrect about Rose being higher than most in Cooperstown (and that is saying quite a bit!). The Cincinnati Reds legend was one of many very biggest to grace a diamond.
47 continued, promising to wipe the slate clear for Rose … after he was convicted of failing to report earnings he earned from signing autographs, a felony, in 1990.
“Anyway, over the following few weeks I can be signing a whole PARDON of Pete Rose, who should not have been playing on baseball, however solely ever on HIS TEAM WINNING. He by no means guess towards himself, or the opposite staff.”
The president ended his diatribe by highlighting a number of of Pete’s profession achievements and with a warning for baseball.
“He had probably the most hits, by far, in baseball historical past, and received extra video games than anybody in sports activities historical past. Baseball, which is dying far and wide, ought to get off its fats, lazy ass, and elect Pete Rose, though it’s miles too late, into the Baseball Hall of Fame.”
Rose was completely banned from Major League Baseball in 1989 after an investigation concluded he wagered on baseball (which he later admitted to), leaving him ineligible for the Hall.
Despite stress through the years from followers and other people like Trump (who beforehand spoke out for Pete), MLB hasn’t budged on their stance.
The 17x All-Star, 3x World Series Champ, and National League Most Valuable Player died in September on the age of 83.