R.I.P. Pete Rose

Another professional sports legend has passed away. Almost immediately after posting my Dikembe Mutumbo RIP blog, I read that an all time great baseball icon, Pete Rose, had passed away at 83. It was a punch to the gut.

Think and say whatever you'd like about Rose's personal life, the dude could play the game of baseball. He brought a fire and passion to the game that no one has come close to matching. I vividly remember seeing a video of Rose playing in an all star game when I was younger and he ran over the catcher to score a run. In a glorified exhibition. I mean, the guy cared, sometimes too much, whenever he set foot on a ball field.

As for regular season and postseason, Rose is an all timer. He had the most hits ever, checking in at 4,256. He had a lifetime batting average of .303. His least amount of regular season games played came when he was 43 years old, when he only appeared in 26 games. Other than that, his next lowest total was 107. He was almost always out on the field playing as hard as he could. He played for 25 years, 19 of which came with the Reds. That is the team that we all remember him being on the most. In the postseason he hit for an average of .321. He showed up when it mattered most and least. He gave it his all until he couldn't anymore. When he left the game, he returned to be a coach. He was okay too. He won over 400 games, ranking him fifth overall in Reds history for managerial wins. Not bad.

Rose’s time as manager was also when the gambling became a true issue. I'm sure he had problems with it his whole career, but it became well known by everyone while he was coaching. He was betting on a ton of games, but the most egregious betting was when he put money on the Reds, while he was their manager. That is wrong, and he should have been given a punishment. But, the punishment was far too harsh in my opinion. The fact that he is not in the hall of fame is laughable. There are some members of the hall of fame that did way more heinous stuff. Ty Cobb was a hate filled, miserable prick of a person. But, he is in the hall of fame. John Smoltz is an alt right weirdo. Jim Leyland was a chain smoking, big chugging lush. Hell, a vast majority of the players in the hall of fame played when the game was still segregated. That was not a fair playing ground whatsoever. So, leaving Rose out of the hall of fame is absurd and laughable. He was one of the best to ever do it, and he belongs in the hall of fame with everyone else. I remember going to a Reds game years ago with my son, my brother and our folks. While Rose may not be in the hall of fame, the Reds paid him a wonderful tribute. He has a statue outside the stadium, of him sliding head first, as he was well known to do. There's a rose wall, one for each of his hits, if memory serves me correctly. They have a ton of pictures, memorabilia and what one could call a shrine to him as a Red. It was awesome to see. I like that they went out of their way to honor him the proper way. He gambled on baseball, so what? Who cares? It is legal now. People do it all the time and they are open about it. Yes, he shouldn't have bet on the team he was managing, but he has more than paid the price. He belongs with all the other legends in the baseball hall of fame. The MLB should do the right thing and posthumously place him in asap.

Rest in Peace Pete Rose. Smack a line drive and dive head first into second base wherever you may be now. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Ken Griffey Jr is 100% a Hall of Famer

Piazza and some outfielder made the Hall of Fame

Piazza and some outfielder made the Hall of Fame

Last week the Baseball Writers Association of America voted Mike Piazza and Ken Griffey Jr into the Hall of Fame. Both are well deserved. Piazza is, probably, the greatest offensive catcher of my lifetime, maybe of all time. He was a threat to get on base almost every time he stepped to the plate. He left a lot to be desired on defense, but his offense was extraordinary.

Ken Griffey Jr, on the other hand, was my generations Willie Mays. He was the best hitter, the fastest player and the greatest center fielder since Mays himself. Look at these career stats. He was a .284 lifetime hitter in an era of dominant pitchers that were on steroids. He hit against guys like Roger Clemens, Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson and hit them regularly. Those guys 100 percent used steroids, in my opinion, and he still hit almost .300 for a career. He hit 630 homeruns with 56 being the most he hit in one season. That's incredible. He did not use steroids, was never accused of using steroids and he still hit 630 career homeruns. You have to be a pretty dominant hitter to put up those home run numbers for a career. He had almost 2,000 career RBI's coming in at 1,836. That means, he consistently knocked in 100 runs every year. Also amazing. He also had an on base percentage of .907. Insane. He was on base almost all the time. He either put himself in position to score, or other people scored because he was always getting on base. He also stole 184 bases in his career. That may not sound like a lot, but for a power hitter such as Griffey, that's phenomenal.

Forgetting about offense for a moment, Griffey is the greatest defensive player I'd ever seen. Some of the catches he made were astonishing. Go and look at them on the internet, they're wonderful. The way he tracked the ball and would chase it down was awesome. He was so fast, could climb the wall with ease and seemed like he could jump out of the stadium for a ball. He was an incredible center fielder, the best since Willie Mays, in mine and many others opinion.

I know that when he left Seattle to go to Cincinnati his career took a turn due to many injuries, but what he did for the first 11 years of his 20 year career were more than enough to get him into the Hall of Fame. Going home to Cincinnati was not the right choice for him, but when he was healthy there, he was still lethal. People seem to forget that, but he was just as dominate. When he signed with the White Sox and later a two year deal to end his career in Seattle, he was a DH and that suited the end of his run to perfection. Just let him bat, his injuries took away his speed and his aggressiveness in the field, and put that fear in pitchers that he still held over them.

Griffey is also the first player ever drafted number one overall to make the Hall of Fame. He lived up to the hype and then some. Griffey is one of the top ten baseball players of all time easily.

All this brings me to my main point of my blog today, how does he not become the first unanimous player to be elected into the Hall of Fame? What asshole writers, there were three of them, didn't think he was worthy of all 100 percent of the vote? What point are they trying to prove? What else could he have done for these people to get their vote? Did he need to hit over 700 homeruns? Was it the fact that he was a career under .300 hitter? Could he have stolen more bases? Is it because he never won a World Series? If so, that's asinine. Sure, Barry Bonds hit over 700 homeruns and had an over .300 career average, but he also took a ton of steroids and HGH and anything else that could give him an advantage. He's still not in the Hall of Fame, but he's getting more and more votes every year. Sure, Rickey Henderson, who is and deserves to be a Hall of Famer, stole more bases, but he was a terrible teammate and he wasn't 1/10 the fielder that Griffey was. And the whole "he never won on the big stage" debate is tired. Many, many undeserving guys have been key cogs in World Series victories for other teams. Do you all remember David Freese in the 2011 World Series? The huge game he had that gave my beloved Cardinals the game 6 win in the World Series won't get him even a sniff to the Hall of Fame. He will never even be in the discussion for the Hall and he was part of multiple World Series titles and appearances while in Saint Louis. I'm sure Griffey is much happier with his overall body of work in baseball than David Freese will ever be. Do these three writers really think, just because David Freese won a couple of World Series rings, that he is more deserving than Griffey Jr? If they truly do, they're more moronic than I initially thought. These three particular writers seem to want to be contrary just to be contrary. No real thought, they just figured that he shouldn't be unanimous since no one has ever been unanimous. They are the "hipsters" of the BBWAA or they are just mad racist or they're just dumb. Ken Griffey Jr is an all time great and that was proven by him getting 99+ percent of the vote, but he deserved all 100 percent of the vote. Shame on those three particular writers. You guys are dicks for the case of being dicks. I hope they feel bad about themselves because they are world class douchebags.

Thank you to Ken Griffey Jr for being an awesome baseball player and an even cooler person. You were an inspiration to me as a young little leaguer and I fully intend to show my son videos of you playing as he gets older and more involved in baseball. I can't think of a better pro for my son to emulate.

One more thing. Please wear your hat backwards, your trademark, for your Hall of Fame bust, it would be awesome.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture Editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man podcast. He once climbed a ten foot chain link fence to rob someone of a wiffle ball homerun. Follow Ty on twitter @tykulik.