Eligible For The Hall

Last week, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that anyone on the league’s permanently ineligible list that was now deceased would be removed, making them eligible for Hall of Fame consideration.  In a statement, Manfred said, “In my view, once an individual has passed away, the purposes of Rule 21 have been served.  Obviously, a person no longer with us cannot represent a threat to the integrity of the game.”  Later in the statement, he said, “I have concluded that permanent ineligibility ends upon the passing of the disciplined individual.”

The driving force behind this change was, of course, Pete Rose.  Rose, who died last September, agreed to be banned by then-Commissioner Bart Giamatti in 1989 after a report by investigator John Dowd confirmed that he had bet on Reds games while he was the manager.  That agreement prohibited Dowd from further investigation which likely would have uncovered that Rose had bet on his team to lose.  Complicating matters, Giamatti died of a heart attack eight days later, making his successors hesitant to remove Rose from the ineligible list during his lifetime.

Along with Rose, this decision applies to 16 other deceased individuals, including members of the 1919 White Sox like Shoeless Joe Jackson and Buck Weaver, among others.  2028 would be the earliest any of the newly eligible players could be inducted into the Hall of Fame, as the Classic Baseball Era Committee will next meet and vote in December 2027.  The two most likely to get any consideration are Rose and Jackson, and neither is the shoe-in their supporters may think.

Book 15 (of 52) – Shoeless Joe

Shoeless Joe – W.P. Kinsella

W.P. Kinsella’s seminal book, which graced the big screen as Field of Dreams, tells the tale of an Iowa farmer who, listening to a mysterious voice that only he can hear, builds a baseball field on his farm for Shoeless Joe Jackson and the rest of the 1919 White Sox, drives to New England to kidnap J.D. Salinger, then heads to Minnesota to find Moonlight Graham, who played a single game for the New York Giants in 1905, before returning home to his family, his farm, and his field.

In what may seem to be a weird fact, due to my baseball fandom, I have never seen Field of Dreams.  I was familiar enough (or so I thought) with the main themes of the movie, but never was interested enough to go ahead and actually watch it.  So when I saw the book on sale through Amazon’s Kindle Store, I surprised myself by buying it.  I enjoyed the book enough to consider watching the movie, should I come across it.  I don’t know if I would go out of my way to find it, though.