baseball

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff proving Mike Gillespie right

Mike Gillespie had a premonition about Ben Orloff.

The USC and UC Irvine coaching legend guided Orloff for two years as an Anteater, watching Orloff become the baseball program’s all-time hits leader with his peak bat-to-ball abilities. But it wasn’t Orloff’s eye-popping swing or swift speed on the basepaths that captivated Gillespie the most. It was the future he imagined for his star infielder, the then-Big West Conference player of the year.

“I don’t know how else to say it: His instincts, his clue, his feel for the game, his baseball IQ, is like nothing else,” Gillespie said as Orloff’s collegiate career wrapped up in 2009. “He should be a major league manager. He might be wasted as a major league manager, because they can do so little, in terms of all these little things.”

The American Baseball Coaches Assn. Hall of Famer, who died in 2020, continued: “He probably should be a college coach, a college head coach.”

It’s mid-May and Orloff sits in the office Gillespie once occupied. Orloff is bald with a bright smile. He’s just 38, and yet this is his 12th season on the UC Irvine coaching staff — and his seventh as the Anteaters’ head coach.

Orloff settles down at a table, crosses his legs and is ready to reminisce, talk shop — and praise the mish-mosh ballclub that’s set the Big West aflame for the second consecutive season in which it won its second regular-season conference championship under the coach.

“Not many people get their first job ever in college with no coaching experience [and become a] paid assistant coach at a place like UC Irvine,” Orloff said. “I’m aware that I was given opportunities that a lot of guys work a long time to get. I’m trying not to ruin it.”

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff walks on the field during a game against USC on Feb. 18.

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff walks on the field during a game against USC on Feb. 18.

(Matt Brown / UC Irvine Athletics)

Gillespie eventually gave Orloff the call back in 2013. The former All-American, who had been playing in the minors since 2009, was hitting just below .300 and had a .379 on-base percentage with double-A Corpus Christi when he decided it was time to return to UC Irvine.

Orloff said he always knew he was going to be a college coach. Whether it was after playing Major League Baseball for 15 years or directly after earning his bachelor’s degree, it was a goal he strived to achieve. But there was only one way he would “quit,” as he put it, and hang up his cleats for a new career: coaching at his alma mater for Gillespie.

Hired in 2013, the then-assistant was fully aware that he knew nothing about the ins and outs of coaching. Sure, he could practice the fundamentals — the basics of fielding and throwing strikes that Orloff still preaches — but much of the job was foreign. All he wanted to do, Orloff said, was to live up to his coach’s expectations.

“I was just extremely motivated to not let coach Gillespie down,” Orloff said. “Now being in this seat, to hire a guy for professional baseball that’s never coached at any level before, you don’t do that.”

He had to learn to recruit — he nabbed outfielder Jacob McCombs (.363 batting average/.448 on-base percentage/.627 slugging percentage) out of the transfer portal from San Diego State, signed junior college infielder Colin Yeaman (hitting .352 with 13 home runs) from College of the Canyons, and has developed Southern California talent such as sophomore starting pitcher Trevor Hansen (8-2 with a 3.14 earned-run average) from Royal High. Orloff said he is willing to sign any player from any level, knowing UC Irvine’s reach is different from blue blood programs, such as UCLA or Vanderbilt.

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff greets outfielder Jacob McCombs during a game.

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff greets outfielder Jacob McCombs during a game.

(Robert Huskey / UC Irvine Athletics)

Orloff remarked that most articles written about the program highlight him. But he is also first to praise his coaching staff, such as pitching coach Daniel Bibona in his 13th year with the Anteaters or hitting coach J.T. Bloodworth, who helped the Anteaters notch their fourth-best batting average in program history a year ago.

“We played together for three years,” he said of Bibona. “Coach Gillespie hired him directly at a pro ball to be the pitching coach. … He does a really good job with these guys.”

“I think we broke every school offensive record last year,” Orloff remarked about Bloodworth’s impact. “This year, the numbers are like the same with a completely brand new group.”

Orloff and his staff brought in 20 new players before the season, restocking a roster that produced a 45-14 record and an NCAA regional appearance in 2024. And the Anteaters haven’t missed a beat. Irvine is ranked 20th in the nation, according to D1Baseball, and is pegged as the top West Coast program in the country — above UCLA — by the National College Baseball Writers Assn., with a No. 11 ranking.

“Winning matters to these guys,” Orloff said of his 39-13 squad. “I think our team has placed what’s best for the team above what’s best for them and I think that’s uncommon, probably in 2025, and so I think it’s why we’ve won.”

Heading into the inaugural Big West Conference tournament, Orloff said UC Irvine can compete with any team in the nation. He points to early-season battles against Nebraska, New Mexico and Vanderbilt — coming up just short of a three-game sweep at the MLB Desert Invitational in February.

When it comes to showing resolve against opponents, Orloff embraces football coach Bill Belichick’s inverse theory of winning — often credited to businessman Charlie Munger’s inversion technique. As Orloff puts it, the technique focuses on how “before you can win, you can’t do the things that make you lose.”

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff speaks to his players before a game against San Diego on April 1.

UC Irvine baseball coach Ben Orloff speaks to his players before a game against San Diego on April 1.

(Matt Brown / UC Irvine Athletics)

“You can look and just see how competitive they’ve been and how complete they’ve been,” said UCLA baseball coach John Savage, a disciple of coach Gillespie as a USC assistant and former Irvine head coach from 2002 to 2004.

“He’s clearly, I think, the best up-and-coming young coach in America. I truly believe that.”

With Irvine on the hunt for its first trip to Omaha since 2014 — and Orloff leading the way — the Anteaters might have the right recipe brewing at Cicerone Field.

Gillespie, long before Orloff took the reins, certainly thought so.

“I’m not kidding, he’s a better coach than I am,” Gillespie said in 2009.

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Tuesday’s Southern Section baseball playoff scores, updated pairings

SOUTHERN SECTION BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

TUESDAY’S RESULTS

SECOND ROUND

DIVISION 1
Corona 11, Los Osos 2
Norco 4, Laguna Beach 2
Villa Park 8, Aquinas 2
St. John Bosco 5, Vista Murrieta 4
Santa Margarita 6, Huntington Beach 5
Los Alamitos 8, Orange Lutheran 0
Mira Costa 5, Arcadia 4
Crespi 5, El Dorado 2

DIVISION 2
West Ranch 12, Crean Lutheran 0
Sultana 6, Loyola 5
Servite 12, Anaheim Canyon 1
Etiwanda 6, Gahr 1
Torrance 3, Oaks Christian 2
Fountain Valley 7, Trabuco Hills 0
Foothill 3, San Clemente 2
Mater Dei 6, Simi Valley 4

DIVISION 3
San Dimas 7, Colony 5
Paraclete 6, Fullerton 3
Arrowhead Christian 6, Warren 3
Beckman 7, Cajon 1
Temecula Valley 9, Great Oak 3
Castaic 4, Crescenta Valley 2
Costa Mesa 5, San Juan Hills 4
Glendora 5, Yucaipa 1

DIVISION 4
Irvine at Woodbridge, late
Thousand Oaks 10, Claremont 3
Dos Pueblos 5, Valencia 4
Trinity Classical Academy 5, Grand Terrace 2
Saugus 9, Murrieta Mesa 3
Ganesha 4, La Canada 1
South Torrance 2, Sonora 0
Oxnard Pacifica 9, Monrovia 8

DIVISION 5
Northwood 10, Laguna Hills 5
Citrus Hill 6, Highland 5
St. Anthony 4, Jurupa Hills 3
Hillcrest 3, Kennedy 1
Liberty 6, La Serna 4
Elsinore 5, Bishop Montgomery 3
Camarillo 6, Moreno Valley 2
Long Beach Poly 4, Riverside Poly 3

DIVISION 6
St. Monica 4, Shadow Hills 1
Rancho Mirage 11, Crossroads 5
Estancia 11, Foothill Tech 1
Orange County Pacifica Christian 5, Muir 0
Marshall 6, Cerritos 4
Santa Fe 11, Ridgecrest Burroughs 5
Heritage Christian 10, Tustin 8
Montebello 1, St. Bonaventure 0

DIVISION 7
Channel Islands 15, Chaffey 2
Norwalk 4, Western Christian 3
Mary Star of the Sea 12, Lancaster 2
Garden Grove 6, Milken Community 0
Grace 14, Silverado 8
Don Bosco Tech 5, Flintridge Prep 1
Riverside Notre Dame 6, Granite Hills 1
Artesia 3, Schurr 0

DIVISION 8
Colton 3, University Prep 2
Duarte 5, New Roads 4
Fillmore 15, San Jacinto Valley 4
Westminster La Quinta 3, Cate 2
Beverly Hills 7, Yeshiva 0
Pioneer at Hesperia Christian, Wednesday
Placentia Valencia 11, Arroyo 8
San Bernardino 8, AB Miller 6

DIVISION 9
Loma Linda Academy 6, Coast Union 5
Coastal Christian 4, Saddleback 3
Mountain View 7, Shalhevet 0
Pomona 13, Academy of Careers & Exploration 3
Twentynine Palms 10, Cobalt 4
Academy for Academic Excellence 10, Garden Grove Santiago 7
Santa Rosa Academy 10, St. Lestonnac 0
Nuview Bridge 16, Ojai Valley 0

FRIDAY’S SCHEDULE
Games at 3:15 unless noted

QUARTERFINALS

DIVISION 1
Corona at Norco
St. John Bosco at Villa Park, noon
Los Alamitos at Santa Margarita
Mira Costa at Crespi

DIVISION 2
Sultana at West Ranch
Servite at Etiwanda
Fountain Valley at Torrance
Mater Dei at Foothill

DIVISION 3
Paraclete at San Dimas
Beckman at Arrowhead Christian
Castaic at Temecula Valley
Glendora at Costa Mesa

DIVISION 4
Thousand Oaks vs. Woodbridge / Irvine
Trinity Classical Academy at Dos Pueblos
Saugus at Ganesha
Oxnard Pacifica at South Torrance

DIVISION 5
Citrus Hill at Northwood
St. Anthony at Hillcrest
Elsinore at Liberty
Long Beach Poly at Camarillo

DIVISION 6
St. Monica at Rancho Mirage
Orange County Pacifica Christian at Estancia
Marshall at Santa Fe
Heritage Christian at Montebello

DIVISION 7
Norwalk at Channel Islands
Garden Grove at Mary Star of the Sea
Don Bosco Tech at Grace
Artesia vs. Riverside Notre Dame

DIVISION 8
Colton vs. Duarte
Westminster La Quinta at Fillmore
Hesperia Christian / Pioneer at Beverly Hills
Placenta Valencia at San Bernardino

DIVISION 9
Coastal Christian at Loma Linda Academy
Pomona at Mountain View
Academy for Academic Excellence at Twentynine Palms
Santa Rosa Academy at Nuview Bridge

Note: Semifinals in all divisions May 27; Finals in all divisions May 30-31.

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Prep Rally: A great week for City Section baseball that ends at Dodger Stadium

Hi, and welcome to another edition of Prep Rally. It’s the greatest weekend for City Section athletics, because the baseball championship games in Open Division and Division I will be held Saturday at Dodger Stadium.

Tantalizingly close

Venice's Canon King (left) gives a chest bump after his home run against Chatsworth.

Venice’s Canon King (left) gives a chest bump after his home run against Chatsworth.

(Craig Weston)

It’s the week in City Section sports where dreams come true. The City Section Open Division and Division I baseball championship games will be played Saturday at Dodger Stadium.

“It’s magical,” Venice center fielder Canon King said of what the experience would be like.

A semifinal doubleheader is set for Tuesday at Cal State Northridge in the Open Division, with Birmingham playing El Camino Real at 3 p.m. and Venice facing Sylmar at 6 p.m. In Division I, the semifinals are Wednesday at Stengel Field in Glendale. Taft will play Carson at 3 p.m., followed by Verdugo Hills against Banning at 6 p.m.

Venice, the No. 1 seed, has been led by King, who has hit six home runs. Here’s a profile of him and his teammates.

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Baseball

It’s nervous time in the Southern Section baseball playoffs that resume Tuesday. Top-seeded Corona, which got a first-round bye in Division 1, makes its debut at home against Los Osos and will send out pitcher Seth Hernandez, who is 17-0 in high school baseball.

There are no upsets in Division 1 despite the seedings. It’s still about ace vs. ace. The one interesting thing to watch is how well the four teams who got first-round byes perform after being inactive for more than a week. That’s Corona, Crespi, Huntington Beach and St. John Bosco. They better be ready to perform with their ace pitchers or suffer an early exit.

Quentin Young of Oaks Christian has hit 14 home runs.

Quentin Young of Oaks Christian has hit 14 home runs.

(Craig Weston)

The Trinity League has done best with Orange Lutheran, Mater Dei, Servite and Santa Margarita all winning their playoff openers. It was a big day for Oaks Christian and Quentin Young, who hit his 14th home run.

Here’s the updated schedule.

Softball

Jackie Morales is one of six freshman contributors for Sherman Oaks Notre Dame.

Jackie Morales is one of six freshman contributors for Sherman Oaks Notre Dame.

(Greg Fiore)

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame has become the surprise team in high school softball, eliminating last season’s Division 1 runner-up Orange Lutheran in a 9-7 stunner, then beating El Segundo 12-10. Who says you need a standout pitcher with a freshman named Jackie Morales?

All Morales did was hit four home runs on the week, including three against Orange Lutheran. Top-seeded Norco remains the favorite in Division 1, but in a season without any dominant pitcher, the Knights’ hitting could keep them going far. Notre Dame hosts El Modena in Wednesday’s quarterfinals. Here’s the complete pairings.

The City Section announced its playoff pairings, with Granada Hills seeded No. 1. Here’s the pairings.

Lacrosse

Loyola has been the No. 1 lacrosse team all season and delivered a second Southern Section title with an 11-3 win over Mater Dei in the Division 1 final. Cash Ginsberg scored three goals and Tripp King had two goals.

Foothill upset No. 1-seeded Mira Costa 12-7 to win the Division 1 girls title. Foothill lost to Marlborough in last year’s final. Brynn Perkins scored five goals.

Track

Benjamin Harris of Servite shows emotion after his win in Division 200 final. He also won the 100.

Benjamin Harris of Servite shows emotion after his win in Division 200 final. He also won the 100.

(Craig Weston)

The weather was cool and overcast, but there were some terrific individual and team performances at the Southern Section track and field championships at Moorpark.

There were two ties for team titles in Division 4 boys (Serra and Viewpoint) and girls (St. Mary’s and Rosary). And Division 3 boys came down to the 4×400 relay with Sherman Oaks Notre Dame prevailing over Servite.

Servite’s Benjamin Harris, only a sophomore, ran a 10.32 100 meters. Rodney Sermons, a junior USC commit at Rancho Cucamonga, ran a 10.36 100. Here’s a rundown on the day’s activities.

On Saturday, the Southern Section will hold its Masters Meet at Moorpark and for the first time have 18 qualifiers competing in races and field events, up from nine.

The City Section will hold its championships Thursday at Birmingham High using the school’s new Mondo track surface.

Volleyball

Connor Koski hammers a kill over Venice's Sam Engelen in boys volleyball.

Connor Koski hammers a kill over Venice’s Sam Engelen in the City Section Open Division boys’ volleyball final at Birmingham High on May 17, 2025.

(Steve Galluzzo / For The Times)

El Camino Real stunned top-seeded Venice to win the City Section Open Division championship. The Royals have one of the brightest young coaches in the Southland in Alyssa Lee, who used to play girls volleyball for Tom Harp at Granada Hills. She’s now won a boys title, girls title and beach title.

Here’s the report.

Mira Costa won the Southern Section Division 1 championship. The state championships begin this week. Here are the pairings.

Pitchers to watch

Angel Cervantes of Warren, a UCLA commit, is one of the hardest throwers in the Southland.

Angel Cervantes of Warren, a UCLA commit, is one of the hardest throwers in the Southland.

(Nick Koza)

There are lots of pitchers scheduled to make an impact in the Southern Section baseball playoffs.

Here’s a look at pitchers to watch over the next couple of weeks.

Interactive sports exhibit

Former UCLA softball pitcher Rachel Garcia stands in the batting cage.

Former UCLA softball pitcher Rachel Garcia stands in the batting cage as the digital Rachel Garcia pitches to visitors at the new Game On! exhibition prepares to open on Thursday at the California Science Center.

(Eric Sondheimer / Los Angeles Times)

The California Science Center next to the Coliseum has opened a free interactive sports exhibit that will stay open through the 2028 Olympic Games. It’s phenomenal, allowing kids and adults to learn about science and participate in baseball, softball, climbing, soccer, basketball and other sports. The first day it was opened saw more than 1,300 visitors.

Here’s a look at something that should become very popular.

Golf

Here come the freshmen. At the Northern Regional for individual golf, freshman Brandon Anderson of Buena won with a 63 and second was freshman Jaden Soong of St. Francis. The individual championships will take place Thursday at Temecula Creek Country Club.

Team titles are scheduled Monday and Tuesday.

Hello Eric

Eric Sondheimer answers questions.

Eric Sondheimer answers questions.

(Nick Koza / For the Times)

It’s time to start a weekly help guide for parents, athletes, coaches, even officials. I’m going to ask questions and answer them with help from others.

First question: “How do I get my coach to notice me more?”

Get to practices before anyone else. Stay until everyone leaves. That lets the coach know you are passionate and committed to getting better. Volunteer to do the little things that coaches notice, like helping to clean a gym floor or bring out water. Show hustle whenever you can. Be bold and talk to your coach and tell him or her that you want to reach your full potential and would appreciate any feedback.

The key is working hard when no one is watching. The coach will see the development and provide a reward known as playing time. If not, keep doing it for yourself and your future. Good grades always bring a smile to any coach. Run extra laps. And you might even tell your coach, “You’re doing a really good job.” They like compliments.

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Notes . . .

Former NFL defensive back Troy Hill is the new head football coach at his alma mater, St. Bonaventure. He becomes the second ex-NFL player recently headed to high school football, joining Carson Palmer, who went to Santa Margarita. . . .

Junior receiver Devin Olmande of Newbury Park has committed to San Jose State. . . .

Irvine University and Woodbridge won the Southern Section Open Division and Division 1 tennis championships. Here’s a report on Woodbridge’s win. . . .

Mission Viejo won the Millikan seven on seven passing tournament, defeating San Diego Lincoln in the final. Charter Oak won its own passing tournament title, defeating Rancho Cucamonga, and San Juan Hills defeated Capistrano Valley in the championship of the Dana Hills passing tournament. . . .

Thatcher Fahlbusch from Mira Costa has committed to Hawaii for volleyball.

From the archives: Easton Hawk

Easton Hawk during his Granada Hills days.

Easton Hawk during his Granada Hills days.

(Eric Sondheimer / Los Angeles Times)

UCLA was searching for a reliable closer in baseball this season, and look who’s emerged late in the season: freshman Easton Hawk from Granada Hills High.

He entered the week with four saves in 17 appearances but has come on strong this month to give the Bruins hope he can be a stopper in the NCAA playoffs. UCLA shared the regular season Big 10 championship with Oregon.

He’s always had good velocity. Throwing strikes is important at the collegiate level.

Here’s a story from 2023.

Recommendations

From ESPN, a story on Palisades High’s baseball team rising up despite obstacles from the Palisades fire.

From Globalsportmatters.com, a story on youth sports and mental health challenges.

Tweets you might have missed

Until next time…

Have a question, comment or something you’d like to see in a future Prep Rally newsletter? Email me at [email protected], and follow me on Twitter at @latsondheimer.

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Prep talk: Receiver Darren Haggerty of Viewpoint shows off his athleticsm

You can go ask any college football recruiter whether they’d be more impressed with a high school player who spends the majority of time in offseason seven-on-seven competitions or working on other skills in track and field? They’d always say track.

Darren Haggerty of Viewpoint High is an example of a football player who’s going to benefit from showing what he can do in track and field.

On Saturday, he pulled off career-best performances to win the Division 4 high jump at 6 feet, 6 inches and the long jump at 22-8 at the Southern Section championships at Moorpark High. He helped Viewpoint share the Division 4 title with Gardena Serra.

He was a little shocked afterward, not knowing he had it in him. He was considered Viewpoint’s best football player last fall as a sophomore, leading the team in receiving with 39 receptions for 674 yards and five touchdowns. He also had 37 tackles on defense. …

Quarterback Luke Fahey led Mission Viejo to the championship of the Millikan seven-on-seven tournament, beating San Diego Lincoln in the final. San Juan Hills won the tournament at Dana Hills and Charter Oak took its own tournament title. …

The semifinals are set for City Section Division I baseball on Wednesday at Stengel Field in Glendale. It will be No. 5 Verdugo Hills vs. No. 1 Banning at 6 p.m. and No. 11 Taft vs No. 2 Carson at 3 p.m.

This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email [email protected].

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High school baseball: City Section playoff scores and pairings

CITY SECTION BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

SATURDAY’S RESULTS

QUARTERFINALS

DIVISION I
#1 Banning 2, #8 Garfield 1
#5 Verdugo Hills 5, #4 San Pedro 4
#11 Taft 4, #14 Roosevelt 3
#2 Carson 6, #7 Palisades 0

DIVISION II
#1 Maywood CES 7, #8 Monroe 1
#12 Marquez at #4 Chavez
#6 Sotomayor 7, #3 Van Nuys 6
#7 Port of Los Angeles 4, #15 SOCES 0

DIVISION III
#1 Jefferson 3, #8 East Valley 0
#4 WISH Academy 8, #5 Huntington Park 2
#3 Triumph Charter 20, #6 Diego Rivera 6
at #2 University 10, #7 RFK Community 0

TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE

SEMIFINALS

At Cal State Northridge

OPEN DIVISION
#3 Birmingham vs. #2 El Camino Real, 3 p.m.
#5 Sylmar at #1 Venice, 6 p.m.

At higher seeds

DIVISION II
#7 Port of Los Angeles at #6 Sotomayor, 3 p.m.
#4 Chavez / #12 Marquez at #1 Maywood CES, 3 p.m.

DIVISION III
#3 Triumph Charter at #2 University, 3 p.m.
#4 WISH Academy at #1 Jefferson, 3 p.m.

WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE

SEMIFINALS

At Stengel Field

DIVISION I
#11 Taft at #2 Carson, 3 p.m.
#5 Verdugo Hills vs. #1 Banning, 6 p.m.

Note: Divisions II-III Finals Fri., May 23 at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. at Stengel Field; Open-Division I Finals Sat. May 24 at Dodger Stadium, time TBD.

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High school baseball: Southern Section playoff results and pairings

SOUTHERN SECTION BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

FRIDAY’S RESULTS

FIRST ROUND

DIVISION 2

Crean Lutheran 6, La Habra 1

West Ranch 4, Palm Desert 3

Sultana 2, Royal 1

Loyola 8, Sierra Canyon 1

Servite 1, Riverside Prep 0

Anaheim Canyon 10, Maranatha 6

Etiwanda 11, Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 5

Gahr 10, La Salle 0

Oaks Christian 9, Redlands East Valley 2

Torrance 5, Chino Hills 1

Fountain Valley 4, El Segundo 2

Trabuco Hills 4, Bonita 3

Foothill 6, Millikan 4

San Clemente 8, Westlake 0

Mater Dei 3, South Hills 0

Simi Valley 3, Ventura 0

DIVISION 4

Woodbridge 4, Cerritos Valley Christian 1

Irvine 8, St. Bernard 0

Thousand Oaks 5, La Quinta 1

Claremont 2, Apple Valley 1

Dos Pueblos 5, Katella 3

Valencia 4, Northview 1

Trinity Classical Academy 3, Don Lugo 2

Grand Terrace 4, Chino 3

Saugus 22, Wiseburn Da Vinci 3

Murrieta Mesa 6, Santa Monica 0

Ganesha 2, Burbank Burroughs 0

La Canada 6, Downey 5

South Torrance 2, Culver City 0

Sonora 3, Linfield Christian 2

Monrovia 5, Capistrano Valley Christian 2

Oxnard Pacifica 8, California 0

DIVISION 6

Shadow Hills 2, Arroyo Valley 1

St. Monica 12, Paramount 8

Crossroads 6, Hesperia 3

Rancho Mirage 7, Rancho Verde 2

Estancia 10, Alhambra 8

Foothill Tech 3, South El Monte 1

Orange County Pacifica Christian 6, Quartz Hill 2

Muir 3, Rio Hondo Prep 1

Cerritos 5, Banning 1

Marshall 7, Leuzinger 0

Ridgecrest Burroughs 7, Savanna 6

Sante Fe 4, Windward 1

Tustin 2, Littlerock 0

Heritage Christian 9, Adelanto 2

St. Bonaventure 3, Pasadena 1

Montebello 2, Oakwood 0

DIVISION 8

Colton, bye

University Prep 9, Bolsa Grande 4

New Roads 11, Santa Ana 6

Duarte 7, Dunn 5

Fillmore 7, Santa Maria Valley Christian 2

San Jacinto Valley 6, Lancaster Desert Christian 4

Cate 3, Azusa 2

Westminster La Quinta 2, Rosemead 1

Yeshiva 7, Rancho Alamitos 3

Beverly Hills 10, Pasadena Poly 6

Hesperia Christian 3, Big Bear 2

Pioneer 5, Calvary Baptist 0

Arroyo 7, Edgewood 0

Placentia Valencia 11, Temecula Prep 5

San Bernardino 5, Rolling Hills Prep 4

AB Miller 7, Cal Lutheran 6

DIVISION 9

Nuview Bridge 17, Gorman 0

TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE

(Games at 3:15 p.m. unless noted)

SECOND ROUND

DIVISION 1

Los Osos at Corona

Norco at Laguna Beach

Villa Park at Aquinas

Vista Murrieta at St. John Bosco

Santa Margarita at Huntington Beach

Orange Lutheran at Los Alamitos

Arcadia at Mira Costa

El Dorado at Crespi

DIVISION 2

Crean Lutheran at West Ranch

Loyola at Sultana

Anaheim Canyon at Servite

Gahr at Etiwanda

Oaks Christian at Torrance

Trabuco Hills at Fountain Valley

Foothill at San Clemente

Mater Dei at Simi Valley

DIVISION 3

San Dimas at Colony

Fullerton at Paraclete

Arrowhead Christian at Warren

Cajon at Beckman

Temecula Valley at Great Oak

Crescenta Valley at Castaic

Costa Mesa at San Juan Hills

Yucaipa at Glendora

DIVISION 4

Irvine at Woodbridge

Thousand Oaks at Claremont

Dos Pueblos at Valencia

Trinity Classical Academy at Grand Terrace

Saugus at Murrieta Mesa

Ganesha at La Canada

South Torrance at Sonora

Monrovia at Oxnard Pacifica

DIVISION 5

Northwood at Laguna Hills

Citrus Hill at Highland

Jurupa Hills at St. Anthony

Kennedy at Hillcrest

Liberty at La Serna

Bishop Montgomery at Elsinore

Camarillo at Moreno Valley

Riverside Poly vs. Long Beach Poly at Long Beach City College

DIVISION 6

Shadow Hills at St. Monica

Rancho Mirage at Crossroads

Foothill Tech at Estancia

Muir at Orange County Pacifica Christian

Cerritos at Marshall

Santa Fe at Ridgecrest Burroughs

Tustin at Heritage Christian

Montebello at St. Bonaventure

DIVISION 7

Channel Islands at Chaffey

Western Christian at Norwalk

Mary Star of the Sea at Lancaster

Milken Community at Garden Grove

Silverado at Grace

Flintridge Prep at Don Bosco Tech

Granite Hills at Riverside Notre Dame

DIVISION 8

University Prep at Colton, Monday

Duarte at New Roads

Fillmore at San Jacinto Valley

Cate at Westminster La Quinta

Yeshiva at Beverly Hills

Pioneer at Hesperia Christian

Arroyo at Placentia Valencia

AB Miller at San Bernardino

DIVISION 9

Coast Union at Loma Linda Academy, Monday at 4 p.m.

Coast Christian at Saddleback

Mountain View at Shalhevet

Pomona at Academy of Careers & Exploration

Twentynine Palms at Cobalt

Academy for Academic Excellence at Garden Grove Santiago

Santa Rosa Academy at St. Lestonnac

Nuview Bridge at Ojai Valley

Note: Quarterfinals in all divisions May 23; Semifinals in all divisions May 27; Finals in all divisions May 30-31.

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Thursday’s City Section baseball playoff scores, updated pairings

CITY SECTION BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

THURSDAY’S RESULTS

SECOND ROUND

DIVISION I
#1 Banning 10, #16 LACES 1
#8 Garfield 3, #9 San Fernando 2
#5 Verdugo Hills 2, #12 Legacy 0
#4 San Pedro 11, #20 Hamilton 0
#14 Roosevelt 5, #3 Narbonne 3
#11 Taft 7, #6 Bell 4
#7 Palisades 7, #10 Kennedy 4
#2 Carson 15, #15 South Gate 5

DIVISION II
#1 Maywood CES 10, #16 Fremont 0
#8 Monroe 1, #9 Torres 0
#12 Marquez 5, #5 Bravo 3
#4 Chavez 2, #13 Reseda 1
#3 Van Nuys 13, #14 Harbor Teacher 4
#6 Sotomayor 5, #11 Vaughn 2
#7 Port of LA 6, #10 Grant 5
#15 SOCES 11, #2 King/Drew 7

DIVISION III
#1 Jefferson 21, #16 Lakeview Charter 0
#9 University Prep Value at #8 East Valley
#5 Huntington Park 14, #12 Collins Family 0
#20 Lincoln at #4 WISH Academy
#3 Triumph Charter 10, #19 Fulton 9
#6 Diego Rivera 18, #11 LA Leadership Academy 17
#7 RFK Community 8, #10 CALS Early College 7
#2 University 23, #15 Downtown Magnets 2

SATURDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Games at 3 p.m. unless noted)

QUARTERFINALS

DIVISION I
#8 Garfield at #1 Banning
#5 Verdugo Hills at #4 San Pedro
#14 Roosevelt at #11 Taft
#7 Palisades at #2 Carson

DIVISION II
#8 Monroe at #1 Maywood CES
#12 Marquez at #4 Chavez
#6 Sotomayor at #3 Van Nuys
#15 SOCES at #7 Port of Los Angeles

DIVISION III
#8 East Valley / #9 University Prep Value at #1 Jefferson
#5 Huntington Park vs. #20 Lincoln / #4 Wish Academy
#6 Diego Rivera at #3 Triumph Charter
#7 RFK Community at #2 University

TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE

SEMIFINALS

OPEN DIVISION
At Cal State Northridge
#3 Birmingham vs. #2 El Camino Real, 3 p.m.
#5 Sylmar at #1 Venice, 6 p.m.

Note: Divisions II-III Semifinals Tues., May 20 at 3 p.m. at higher seeds; Division I Semifinals Wed., May 21 at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. at Stengel Field; Divisions II-III Finals Fri., May 23 at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. at Stengel Field; Open-Division I Finals Sat. May 24 at Dodger Stadium, time TBD.

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Pete Rose is a sure thing for the Baseball Hall of Fame now, right? Right?

When Rob Manfred announced Tuesday that a dead man can no longer be banned from baseball, my first thought was this: If Pete Rose is going into the Hall of Fame, then Barry Bonds is too.

My second thought was this: What if neither one is going into the Hall of Fame?

Sounds silly, I know. There is no reason to reinstate Rose except to make him eligible for the Hall of Fame. Baseball does not need a commissioner setting up a fresh recounting of Rose’s sins every few years because he keeps appearing on a Hall of Fame ballot without getting elected. The Hall of Fame does not need that either, and Manfred is on the Hall’s board of directors.

But, over the years, that very board has made crystal clear who it did not want in its hallowed Hall, Rose and Bonds included.

The Hall did not have a rule against the election of banned players until it hurried to adopt that rule when Rose was banned. And, in 2017, amid the debate over Bonds and Roger Clemens, Hall of Famer Joe Morgan — then the vice president of the Hall — wrote in a letter to voters: “Steroid users don’t belong here.”

Rose’s fate will be decided by a committee selected by the Hall of Fame, since so much time has passed since his playing days. After the Baseball Writers Assn. of America rejected Bonds and Clemens 10 times, their fate was left to such a committee.

In the 10 BBWAA elections, the share of yes votes for Bonds and Clemens ranged from one-third to two-thirds. In the subsequent committee election, the share of yes votes for Bonds and Clemens did not even reach one-fourth.

That committee included 16 members: six Hall of Famers; seven team executives or owners (the AngelsArte Moreno included); two baseball writers; and one baseball historian.

The members might be different this time, but the rule is the same: 75% of the vote required for election. Of the six other players on that ballot with Bonds and Clemens, one got elected: Fred McGriff. No one else topped 50%.

Rose is the all-time leader in hits, Bonds the all-time leader in home runs. No one has more MVP awards than Bonds; no one has more Cy Young awards than Clemens. But the Hall of Fame instructs voters to consider “integrity, sportsmanship (and) character,” and the committee voters — Hall of Famers, club officials, writers and historians — all consider themselves guardians of the game.

The Hall of Famers themselves, particularly so. They were not thrilled that Rose repeatedly showed up on induction weekends at Cooperstown, stealing the spotlight so he could peddle his autograph. They may not be amenable to sharing the stage with contemporaries they may believe disgraced the game.

“There will always be a cloud above any discussion about Pete Rose,” Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt told the Athletic.

Even on whether he should get into the Hall?

“I think if you posed the question to all of the living Hall of Famers right now, “ Schmidt said, “I think it would almost be 50-50.”

In his letter, Morgan did not name Bonds or Clemens or anyone else, but it is difficult to imagine his words would not also apply to the Rose situation.

“I hope the Hall of Fame’s standards won’t be lowered with the passage of time,” Morgan wrote.

“For over eighty years, the Hall of Fame has been a place to look up to, where the hallowed halls honor those who played the game hard and right. I hope it will always remain that way.”

The Hall of Fame does not say how individual committee members voted. That lack of transparency, although unfortunate, could be critical in maintaining the independence of the vote, given the pressure applied by President Trump, who publicly campaigned before and after his election for Rose’s induction. Manfred met with Trump last month.

If the purpose of the Hall of Fame is to honor the game’s very best players, then of course Rose and Bonds and Clemens should be in it. The track record of the committees that will decide on Rose and Bonds and Clemens indicates that those voters believe in criteria beyond statistics, so jumping to the immediate conclusion — Rose is getting in! — may be no sure thing.

On Wednesday, I checked. Bookies.com put the chance of Rose getting into the Hall at 83.3%.

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Watch Mookie Betts’ toddler son run away with first-pitch baseball

Now pitching for the Dodgers, Kaj Betts!

Wait, strike that …

Now running away with the baseball, Kaj Betts!

The 2-year-old son of Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts threw out the ceremonial first pitch on his dad’s bobblehead night on Tuesday at Dodger Stadium — but not before making a break for right field with the ball.

Wearing a replica of his father’s No. 50 jersey, Kaj had the ball in hand while walking near the third base line and home plate. Betts was jogging into place to be on the receiving end of his son’s ceremonial pitch, which was supposed to be thrown from just in front of the plate.

Kaj had other ideas. He took off in a full toddler sprint, with a look of determination on his face as he ran as fast as his little legs could carry him.

At one point, his 6-year-old sister Kynlee nearly caught up with him, but Kaj turned on the jets and eluded her. He made it all the way to the basepath before pausing just long enough for his mom, Betts’ wife Brianna, to scoop him up and deliver him back to his designated spot.

Kaj Betts wearing a Dodgers jersey runs away with a baseball, with big sister Kynlee wearing a sparkly dress close behind

Kaj Betts runs away with the ceremonial first-pitch ball, with big sister Kynlee in hot pursuit.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

From there, Kaj delivered an on-target pitch/roll to Betts, who brought the ball back to his son. The adventure-seeking tyke immediately turned and took a step toward the outfield before his pops quickly gathered him for some photos.

The adorable antics were probably the most entertaining aspect of the night for L.A. fans, who then had to watch their team get clobbered by the Athletics 11-1. Betts went 0 for 3 but drove in the Dodgers’ only run of the night. In the third inning, Betts hit a ground ball to A’s shortstop Jacob Wilson, who bobbled the ball to allow Betts to reach first and Chris Taylor to score from third.



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Tuesday’s City Section baseball playoff scores, updated pairings

CITY SECTION BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

TUESDAY’S RESULTS
FIRST ROUND

DIVISION I
#16 LACES 5, #17 Franklin 1
#12 Legacy 6, #21 North Hollywood 3
#20 Hamilton 7, #13 South East 3
#14 Roosevelt 6, #19 Marshall 3
#15 South Gate 7, #18 Wilson 6

DIVISION II
#16 Fremont 7, #17 Eagle Rock 6
#13 Reseda 2, #20 Sun Valley Magnet 0
#14 Harbor Teacher 17, #19 Stella 7
#15 SOCES 11, #18 Arleta 8

DIVISION III
#16 Lakeview Charter 11, #17 Rise Kohyang 1
#20 Lincoln 19, #13 Jordan 2
#19 Fulton 14, #14 Locke 7
#15 Downtown Magnets 14, #18 Middle College 5

WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Games at 3 p.m. unless noted)

QUARTERFINALS

OPEN DIVISION
#8 Chatsworth at #1 Venice
#5 Sylmar at #4 Cleveland
#6 Poly at #3 Birmingham
#7 Granada Hills at #2 El Camino Real

THURSDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Games at 3 p.m. unless noted)

SECOND ROUND

DIVISION I
#16 LACES at #1 Banning
#9 San Fernando at #8 Garfield
#12 Legacy at #5 Verdugo Hills
#20 Hamilton at #4 San Pedro
#14 Roosevelt at #3 Narbonne
#11 Taft at #6 Bell
#7 Palisades at #10 Kennedy
#15 South Gate at #2 Carson

DIVISION II
#16 Fremont at #1 Maywood CES
#9 Torres at #8 Monroe
#12 Marquez at #5 Bravo
#13 Reseda at #4 Chavez
#14 Harbor Teacher at #3 Van Nuys
#11 Vaughn at #6 Sotomayor
#10 Grant at #7 Port of LA
#15 SOCES at #2 King/Drew

DIVISION III
#16 Lakeview Chatter at #1 Jefferson
#9 University Prep Value at #8 East Valley
#12 Collins Family at #5 Huntington Park
#20 Lincoln at #4 WISH Academy
#19 Fulton at #3 Triumph Charter
#11 LA Leadership Academy at #6 Diego Rivera
#10 CALS Early College at #7 RFK Community
#15 Downtown Magnets at #2 University

Note: Divisions I-III Quarterfinals Saturday, May 17 at 3 p.m. at higher seeds; Open Division Semifinals Tuesday, May 20, site and times TBD; Divisions II-III Semifinals Tuesday, May 20 at 3 p.m. at higher seeds; Division I Semifinals Wednesday, May 21 at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. at TBD; Divisions II-III Finals Friday, May 23 at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. at Stengel Field, Glendale; Open-Division I Finals Saturday, May 24 at Dodger Stadium, time TBD.

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Pete Rose reinstated by MLB, Hall of Fame election is possible

Pete Rose was posthumously removed from Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list Tuesday, making the all-time hits leader eligible for induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

Rose had been exiled from the sport since 1989, after he was found by then-commissioner Bart Giamatti (yes, the father of actor Paul Giamatti) to have been betting on his team’s games while he was manager of the Cincinnati Reds. Rose died Sept. 30, 2024, at age 83.

Rose’s daughter, Fawn Rose, filed a petition for reinstatement Jan. 8 and met with current MLB commissioner Rob Manfred. In February, President Trump advocated for the lifetime ban to be lifted in a social media post, then met with Manfred in April to discuss the matter.

Jeffrey Lenkov, a Los Angeles lawyer who represented Rose at the time of his death and prepared the petition pro bono, told The Times the decision was the result of several years of working with Manfred and his executive team.

“The Rose family and I are extremely overjoyed at the wisdom, courage and compassion exhibited by the commissioner,” Lenkov said. “The reinstatement in and of itself is a historic moment because many people, including Pete at times, thought the ban would never be lifted.

“Getting into the Hall of Fame on his merits is an opportunity he wanted and should be able to receive now.”

Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose hits a line drive single to break Ty Cobb's all-time hits record in 1985.

Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose hits a line drive single to break Ty Cobb’s all-time hits record in 1985.

(Associated Press)

From his 24-year career that resulted in more MLB hits — 4,256 — than any other player in history to his lifetime ban, Rose’s saga was as complex and sad as it was triumphant. Pete Rose Night will take place Wednesday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati, and the decision to lift the ban undoubtedly will elevate the mood.

Here is a look at key elements of his rise, fall and potential inclusion in the Hall of Fame.

Will Rose immediately be inducted into the Hall of Fame?

No. Barring an unforeseen exception, a three-year waiting period will apply before Rose can be put on the ballot because the committee that could vote him in doesn’t convene until December 2027 to consider candidates for induction in the summer of 2028.

Rose remains ineligible to be voted in by the Baseball Writers Assn. of America because its ballot includes only candidates whose playing careers ended no more than 15 years prior to the election. Players are eligible to be voted into the Hall of Fame by the baseball writers five years after they retire. However in 1991, two years after Rose was banned from baseball and months before he was set to make the ballot, the Hall’s board of directors passed a rule prohibiting anybody on the ineligible list from being a candidate for induction.

Now that he is eligible, his case will be reviewed by the 16-member Classic Baseball Era Committee that evaluates players who made their greatest impact before 1980. Rose would qualify for consideration because his 24-year career began in 1963.

The committee voted in Dick Allen and Dave Parker this year. When it convenes again to vote for 2028 induction, Rose would need an aye from a 75% majority — 12 of the 16 members.

What did Rose do to deserve a lifetime ban?

Since before the 1919 Black Sox Scandal resulted in Shoeless Joe Jackson and other players being banned for life for taking money from gamblers and throwing games, Major League Baseball has had a rule against gambling to protect the integrity of the game. Rule 21(d) is posted in every clubhouse and states: “Any player, umpire, or Club or League official or employee, who shall bet any sum whatsoever upon any baseball game in connection with which the bettor has a duty to perform, shall be declared permanently ineligible.”

Rose bet on the Cincinnati Reds when he was the team’s player-manager in 1985 and ‘86, and the manager in ’87. An MLB investigation headed by lawyer John Dowd resulted in a 225-page report released in 1989 that named men that Rose allegedly placed bets with and cited evidence that Rose bet on Reds games.

Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose leans against the dugout before a spring training game in 1989.

Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose before a spring-training game March 22, 1989, after the Commissioner’s Office investigation into his gambling was released.

(John Swart / Associated Press)

After denying for nearly 15 years that he bet on baseball, Rose admitted it in his 2004 book, “My Prison Without Bars,” written with Rick Hill. Later, he would sign and sell baseballs with the inscription, “Sorry I bet on baseball.” The balls currently go for $200 to $400 apiece online.

Born and raised in Cincinnati, Rose began gambling as a youngster when his dad took him to a local racetrack. By the time he reached the big leagues, he bet on college and pro basketball and pro football in addition to the horses.

“On Feb. 5, 1986, I wrote three checks for eight grand each to cover my losses on the NFL playoffs,” Rose wrote. “The NFL turned into March Madness, which turned into the NBA playoffs, which always turned into the skids.

“I always lived by one hard and fast rule: You don’t bet on baseball. But for the first time in my life, I was no longer playing baseball, just managing. A part of me was still looking for ways to recapture the high I got from winning batting titles and World Series. If I couldn’t get the high from playing baseball, then I needed a substitute.

“I can’t honestly remember the first time I bet on baseball. But I remember the first time I spoke openly about it. I was sitting in my living room, watching the 1986 playoffs between the Mets and the Astros. I had a group of friends over for the game. Without even thinking of the consequences, I said, ‘Betting on the playoffs makes the games more exciting to watch.’ ”

Rose’s immense popularity in his hometown began to erode when the Dowd Report was made public on June 27, 1989.

“Forever and ever and ever, the people here have been solidly behind Pete,” Marty Brennaman, longtime broadcaster for the Reds, told The Times’ Bill Plaschke. “This is the most provincial city I’ve lived in. I can’t imagine a more provincial city.

“But now, there is a segment of the population where, if they haven’t completely gone the other way against Pete, there is at least an element of doubt in their minds. People are becoming divided.”

Longtime Cincinnati historian Dan Hurley insisted the public reaction was even harsher.

“I think the reaction finally is, ‘Hey, they got him,’ ” Hurley said of Rose. “And for us, that’s not very pleasant.”

Rose does have his supporters within baseball. Terry Francona, his former teammate who is in his first season as Reds manager, recently said, “If he’s not in the Hall of Fame, there isn’t one.”

Why the change of heart by MLB?

Pete Rose speaks at a news conference in Las Vegas in 2015 after MLB denied his petition to rescind his lifetime ban.

Pete Rose speaks at a news conference in Las Vegas after MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said he has no intention of altering Rose’s lifetime ban from baseball.

(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

Rose first petitioned for reinstatement in 1997 when Bud Selig was commissioner. Selig didn’t meet with Rose until 2002 and did not rule on the issue before he retired in 2006. Manfred rejected a second petition by Rose in 2015, saying, “Mr. Rose has not presented credible evidence of a reconfigured life either by an honest acceptance by him of his wrongdoing, so clearly established by the Dowd Report, or by a rigorous, self-aware and sustained program of avoidance by him of the circumstances that led to his permanent eligibility in 1989.

“Absent such credible evidence, allowing him to work in the game presents an unacceptable risk of a future violation by him of Rule 21, and thus to the integrity of our sport. I, therefore, must reject Mr. Rose’s application for reinstatement.”

The fact that Rose died in September created an opportunity to revisit his status. If the permanently ineligible list exists to prevent a person who poses a threat to the integrity of the game from working in baseball, could that status change when the person is no longer living?

Roses adorn the statue of Pete Rose at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati after the all-time hits leader died.

Roses adorn the statue of Pete Rose at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati after the all-time hits leader died.

(Kareem Elgazzar / Associated Press)

That argument was made in the December petition by Rose’s family, and Manfred took it into consideration.

“The decision was very complex and it’s not easily said that it could have been done during his lifetime,” Lenkov said. “MLB had a lot of factors to work through. They had to be receptive to listening for a number of years on this issue, and they did.

“Pete in his lifetime felt he had done his time, paid the price. I believe he lived with a scarlet letter on him because of it. His punishment was substantial.”

The relationship between gambling and professional sports — including MLB — has evolved dramatically in recent years. Sports betting is legal in 40 states, and the American Gaming Assn. estimates that its total economic impact is $328 billion a year and revenue from it exceeded $115 billion in 2024.

Yet restrictions still apply, again to protect the integrity of the game. Can a baseball player, coach or umpire bet on March Madness brackets, the Super Bowl or participate in a fantasy football league? Yes. Can they bet on anything — baseball or otherwise — through illegal or offshore bookmakers? No.

What was President Trump’s role in the reinstatement?

Seemingly out of nowhere, the president injected himself into the conversation. Even before the family’s petition for reinstatement had become public, Trump posted a bombastic message on Truth Social on Feb. 28 that read:

“Major League Baseball didn’t have the courage or decency to put the late, great, Pete Rose, also known as ‘Charlie Hustle,’ into the Baseball Hall of fame. Now he is dead, will never experience the thrill of being selected, even though he was a FAR BETTER PLAYER than most of those who made it, and can only be named posthumously. WHAT A SHAME!

“Anyway, over the next few weeks I will be signing a complete PARDON of Pete Rose, who shouldn’t have been gambling on baseball, but only bet on HIS TEAM WINNING. He never betted against himself, or the other team. He had the most hits, by far, in baseball history, and won more games than anyone in sports history. Baseball, which is dying all over the place, should get off its fat, lazy ass, and elect Pete Rose, even though far too late, into the Baseball Hall of Fame!”

No evidence has surfaced of Rose betting on the Reds to lose. After confessing in his book that he bet on baseball, he emphasized that point.

“I bet on my own team to win,” Rose told NJ.com. “That’s what I did in a nutshell. I was wrong, but I didn’t taint the game. I bet on my team every night because that’s the confidence that I had in my players. And I was wrong.”

A pardon wasn’t necessary for Manfred to reinstate Rose, although in 1990 Rose served five months in prison after pleading guilty to tax evasion.

Trump met with Manfred at the White House on April 16, but neither man spoke publicly about what they discussed. MLB issued a statement that said, “President Trump is a longtime fan of baseball. As he has done in the past, Commissioner Manfred was pleased to visit the White House again to discuss issues pertaining to baseball with the president.”

What are Pete Rose’s Hall of Fame credentials?

Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose is congratulated by his teammates after he broke Ty Cobb's hitting record.

Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose is congratulated by his teammates after he broke Ty Cobb’s hitting record in Cincinnati on Sept. 11, 1985.

(Associated Press)

Rose broke Ty Cobb’s career hits total of 4,189 in 1985 and finished with 4,256. That alone would be enough for entry into the Hall of Fame, but Rose also was named National League Rookie of the Year in 1963 and the NL Most Valuable Player in 1973. He won three batting titles and three World Series titles — two with the Reds in 1975 and ’76 and one with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1980.

Rose batted .303 with an on-base percentage of .375, earning the nickname Charlie Hustle because he sprinted to first base even on a walk. He led the NL in hits seven times, doubles five times, and in 1978 put together a 44-game hitting streak, second in baseball history to Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game streak.

Rose played in more games (3,562), had more plate appearances (15,890) and more at-bats (14,053) than any other player.

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