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Number of Black MLB players is lowest in decades, and some are looking to youth baseball for a cause BY Saundra Weathers Pinellas County UPDATED 1:10 PM ET Oct. 03, 2023 PUBLISHED 6:40 PM ET Oct ...
13 Bulldogs have now entered the transfer portal, including key JUCO talent and hometown favorites. Here’s what their exits mean for the future of Mississippi State baseball.
On May 13, 2025, Major League Baseball (MLB) Commissioner Rob Manfred announced he was lifting lifetime bans on Pete Rose and 16 other deceased players, including “Shoeless” Joe Jackson. As a ...
View of American baseball player Shoeless Joe Jackson (1888 - 1951), of the Cleveland Naps PhotoQuest/Getty Images Shoeless Joe Jackson and Pete Rose are now eligible for the Hall of Fame.
A s news broke that Shoeless Joe Jackson and Pete Rose are now eligible for the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame as a result of being removed from the permanently ineligible list, some people ...
This undated file photo shows White Sox pitcher Eddie Cicotte, one of the key members from the infamous 1919 Black Sox scandal. Cicotte is among those no longer banned from baseball. AP ...
Aug. 17 to Sept.13: 3-22; To the White Sox's credit, they did manage to win five of the final six games, so while they have the most losses since 1900, their .253 winning percentage is not the ...
Happy Felsch, a Milwaukee baseball legend in the early 1900s and part of the "Black Sox" scandal, was reinstated to MLB alongside Pete Rose.
Jackson and seven other Chicago White Sox were banned from playing professional baseball in 1921 by MLB's first commissioner, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, for fixing the 1919 World Series.
With Black sports history under attack, a new book offers recognition ‘Play Harder,’ is rich history of baseball that shows how players like Jackie Robinson and Willie Mays contributed not ...
Eighty players showed up for Hempfield’s first workout in early March. Only 37 could be kept for the varsity and JV. Baseball is enormously popular in the Hempfield and Mountville areas.
Black baseball goes back to the 1860s, when ball clubs were cropping up in towns all across the nation. Though, with few exceptions, there were white teams and Black teams.