The Hamilton Spectator

We all want to believe Ohtani. We all wanted to believe Rose

- MAC ENGEL

FORT WORTH, TEXAS The invisible line for profession­al sports was drawn on Aug. 24, 1989, when the remaining innocence to it all was buried, and the reality of our “heroes” was exposed.

That was the day Major League Baseball suspended Pete Rose for life because he bet on MLB games. These sentiments belong to author Keith O’Brien, who has written a fantastic new book that is the definitive account about the exiled hit king, “Charlie Hustle: The rise and fall of Pete Rose, and the last glory days of baseball.”

It is a coincidenc­e that, as O’ Brien’s book is released, MLB is dealing with a potential scandal involving its biggest star, L.A. Dodgers pitcher/hitter Shohei Ohtani.

The first and obvious comparison to be made with Ohtani is Rose.

More than two weeks have passed since MLB announced it is investigat­ing Ohtani for his relationsh­ip with his ex-interprete­r, Ippei Mizuhara. Ohtani fired Mizuhara after he reportedly stole $4.5 million (U.S.) from the baseball star to help cover a massive gambling debt.

If Ohtani knew about any of this, and there is even a sentence to suggest he was aware his BFF was putting money on games in which he was playing, there must be consequenc­es.

Ohtani said in a statement he’s never bet on sports, or “wilfully sent money to the bookmaker.”

I believe him, just as I believed Pete Rose back in 1989.

“(MLB) believed him,” O’Brien said in a recent interview of Rose telling MLB officials he would not bet on baseball because he “wouldn’t be that stupid.”

People bought it until the stacks of evidence said Pete was indeed that stupid. Or arrogant. Or both.

Whereas Pete was guilty of betting on just about anything, Ohtani may just be at fault for trusting “a friend,” and never bothering to look at a bank account full of endless zeroes.

“The initial allegation­s that Pete Rose faced in 1989 are not the initial allegation­s that Shohei faces now,” O’Brien said. “There are some similariti­es here. It was men in Pete’s inner circle who were placing the bets with the bookies.

“What we are about to find out, again, is whether there is any connection to Shohei and baseball gambling. We’re about to find out what kind appetite the public, the fans and baseball itself has for a lengthy investigat­ion into its most famous player. The Pete Rose investigat­ion took the entire season, and it destroyed the 1989 season.”

The difference­s in the eras are vast, beginning with a consuming public that may not believe any report released by MLB. We have more informatio­n available at our fingertips than ever before, and we trust so little of it.

In 1989, gambling was still a Las Vegas, Atlantic City or backroombo­okie thing. In 2024, gambling is available in most states, and betting on ball games is readily accessible.

In 1989, our sports heroes were worthy of statues and worship. In 2024, our sports heroes are often covered in mud, their blood streams full of performanc­e-enhancing drugs and their personal lives sometimes an array of unflatteri­ng misdeeds.

In 1989, the MLB commission­er was a former Yale English professor, A. Bartlett Giamatti, who deeply loved, and idealized, the game of baseball. In 2024, the MLB commission­er is Rob Manfred, a lawyer whose priority is to win contract negotiatio­ns and to expand profit margins for the owners.

In 1989, the majority of sports media was independen­tly funded with the money, drive and manpower to exhaustive­ly cover anything. In 2024, the sports media is a shell of what it once was as sports leagues “report” the news, and the demand for independen­t sports journalism decreases.

Despite America’s evolving, outof-the-closet relationsh­ip with gambling, no league wants any part of an allegation that its consumers are watching a “fixed match.”

That is why MLB must look at its biggest superstar player. In our digital age, all of the records will be available to review. Shohei may be, as he says, innocent, a victim of trusting someone who took advantage of his naivete.

Pete Rose’s lifetime ban offered so many lessons, up to and including the reality that baseball won’t stop with the news that one beloved, celebrated, accomplish­ed player was a lying, arrogant fool.

Because, “The one constant through all the years has been baseball.

“America has rolled by like an army of steamrolle­rs. It’s been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt and erased again. But baseball has marked the time.”

Whatever happens, baseball will go on. It may be bruised, but it won’t stop.

We all want to believe Shohei Ohtani.

We all wanted to believe Pete Rose, too.

 ?? ?? Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani hits his first home run of the season off of San Francisco Giants pitcher Taylor Rogers in the seventh inning in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani hits his first home run of the season off of San Francisco Giants pitcher Taylor Rogers in the seventh inning in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN LOS ANGELES TIMES ??
ALLEN J. SCHABEN LOS ANGELES TIMES
 ?? ?? Pete Rose
Pete Rose

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