Bronson: The Man. The Myth. The Cincinnati Celebrity.
Read More...Arroyo has pitched well enough that he could well end up in the Reds Hall of Fame some day.
“That’s something I don’t think about,” he said. “It’s just weird, man. I’ve said it a lot about other guys. You look at Brandon Phillips’ numbers, and they’re neck and neck with Joe Morgan, and you think of Joe Morgan as a god, but when you play next to Brandon Phillips for eight years, you don’t think of him as anything but ...
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1. Walt Davis posted on November 07, 2012 at 08:05 AM # hit 0 | hit 0As far as I know, the doors are open to Rose as long as he buys a ticket like everybody else. Heck, Joe Morgan can probably put him on the guest list to save him a few bucks.
That's all; just a spring in one's step! Plus, lots of people were doing them, so apparently that's OK.
Maybe it's unfair for me to expect a posting on cincinnati.com to be anything but sympathetic to Rose.
Given that this involves two game fixer/throwers, I'm somehow not surprised.
I would be surprised if there were. I'd say it's a vastly different context. Jackson was out of baseball in 1920 and the HOF didn't induct it's first class until 1936. No one would have been arguing him to go in during those early years for, although he was a great player, he clearly was not on the same level as the early inductees. Then it's into WW II and no one was being elected. The Old Timers committee stuffed a bunch of guys in during 1945 and 1946, whereupon the writers woke up and started trying to do a better job of electing players. By then Jackson's been gone for nearly 30 years and his contemporaries are probably not lobbying much for him if at all. The relationships between players in those days and the level of communication and interaction would have been drastically different as well.
WTF?
I like how blithely these guys ignore that Rose lived with a steroid dealer late in his career.
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