
In 1989: Pete Rose accepted a lifetime ban from baseball from then-Commissioner Bart Giamatti for betting on baseball. Although he vehemently denied gambling, Rose still signed off on the ban. Giamatti, who admitted that the decision took an awful toll on his health, died shortly afterwards. Rose, who holds the all-time career hits mark with 4,256, was also declared ineligible for the Hall of Fame. In 2004, he finally admitted to not only betting on baseball, but also on the Reds, the team he was managing at the time. In his book, My Prison Without Bars, Rose told current Commissioner Bud Selig that he bet because he didnt think hed get caught. No player ever declared permanently ineligible has ever been reinstated into baseball.
In 1951: Nobody could pull a PR stunt like St. Louis Browns owner Bill Veeck. In a game against the As, Veeck held Grandstand Managers Day, in which fans made the final decisions for the Browns. Coaches held up placards, and fans would vote yes or no. The 1,100 plus skippers apparently made the right ones, as a few of the players they elected to play helped the Browns defeat the As 5-3. They also told players when to bunt, steal, and when to change pitchers. www.baseballreliquary.org