The dichotomy of Pete Rose

Pete Rose is all about morality.
No sports figure sparks more passion, whether you’re for him or against him, than Pete Rose does. That’s because he ignites our basic sense of moral values, the tenets we grew up with and by which we, at least partially, have defined ourselves since childhood.
On the field, Rose epitomized the morality of the fan: play to win, give it your all, every day, no matter what.
In fact, one of his most famous quotes was, “I never got booed in a white uniform,” because he never mailed it in, never half-assed it, never jogged out a fly ball. If he was on your team, you loved him.
Integrity. Heart. Hustle. Those are the things that defined Pete Rose’s game, Charlie Hustle’s game.
On the field, Pete Rose was sports morality.
Hell, lots of people were willing to overlook his cheap shot on Ray Fosse as a biproduct of Rose’s drive to win.
Just like lots of people are willing to overlook his gambling on baseball. After all, the major leagues’ last Player/Manager never bet against his own club, never threw a game. Pete always bet on Pete.
So what if, off the field, Rose was a different kind of hustler — trying to hustle the system, trying to hustle you for sympathy, for Hall of Fame entry?
Off the field, Pete Rose was and is a total scumbag.
A degenerate gambler. An ignoramus. A liar. A remorseless liar. And, did I mention, a liar?
That’s Pete Rose: Mr. Morality on the field, Mr. Amoral off of it.
I believe what Pete Rose did was wrong. I believe in forgiveness. I believe what he did doesn’t compare to what steroid users have done. (Ironic that in those years Pete was betting on the game, Jose Canseco was sticking a hypodermic needle in Mark McGwire’s butt cheek.) I believe that Rose, the All-Time Hits King, should be in the Hall of Fame.
My beliefs are largely based on my morality. But if you disagree with me about Rose, I understand the moral reasons for your beliefs. I support Rose’s Hall of Fame plea because of his accomplishments and morality on the field; you oppose it because of his mistakes and absence of morality off the field. I understand, because your morality is valid too.

Baseball commissioner Bud Selig is considering
Last night, Manny Ramirez made his triumphant 

