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Les Murakami, the 89-year-old architect of the University of Hawaii baseball program, today was inducted into the National ...
There's a new baseball hall of fame, of sorts, making the rounds on Instagram and X. It's called the MLB Hall of Pretty Good. And on Friday, Denard Span was officially elected. To be eligible for ...
It’s a story that the National Baseball Hall of Fame is sharing at its latest exhibit in Cooperstown, The Souls of the Game, Voices of Black Baseball. “You get a little vibe from it, right.
Mike Schmidt, a teammate of Pete Rose's with the Philadelphia Phillies from 1979 to 1983, has been among the Cincinnati Reds legend's most vocal supporters among National Baseball Hall of Famers ...
Pete Rose is, somewhat stunningly, off Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list. But that doesn’t mean he’s automatically in the Hall of Fame. Casual baseball fans often equated ...
Keep Pete Rose Out of the Baseball Hall of Fame. ... a National League MVP, and 17 All-Star appearances certainly has an inarguable place in history. But, until this week, ...
COOPERSTOWN, NY (WBNG) -- The National Baseball Hall of Fame issued a statement on Tuesday, after Major League Baseball reinstated Pete Rose, 1919 Black Sox, and several others. Read the full ...
Barry Bonds is not in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. And unless the eligibility rules change, he may never get in. But the ball he hit for his record 756th homer is ensconced behind a glass ...
After the 2025 National Baseball Hall of Fame Class was announced on Tuesday, longtime ESPN reporter Buster Olney suggested that it should be a requirement for Baseball Writers’ Association of ...
The National Baseball Hall of Fame inducted its four newest members Sunday. The 2024 Hall of Fame class features three players -- Adrian Beltré, Joe Mauer and Todd Helton -- and manager Jim Leyland.
Hall of Fame Weekend 2025 will take place July 25-28 in Cooperstown. The Class of 2025 will be inducted at 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 27 at the Clark Sports Center.
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Joe Mauer closed out Sunday’s National Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony with 27 words that summarized the experience for he and his fellow honorees.