In 1999 he was voted to baseball's All-Century team along with every one of the aforementioned players. Rose was a member of three world championship teams, went to the World Series a total of five times, was named the National League's Rookie of the Year in 1963 and its Most Valuable Player in 1973. Rose also received the award for Sporting News Player of the Decade in the 70's, and in 1978 signed the most lucrative contract in baseball's history (to that point) at $3.2 million for four years (Pete Rose 305). .
The Reds brought Rose back in 1984 as a player-manager, a role that he retained through the 1986 season. Rose remained manager of the Reds until 1989, when he was replaced by former teammate Tommy Helms after compiling a record of 412 wins and 373 losses (Carter).
Banishment.
Pete Rose was known to have gambled extensively on sports throughout the 1980's. During his tenure as manager of the Reds suspicions began to arise that Rose was betting on baseball, the sport's "capital crime" (Berkow D7). Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti sent lawyer John Dowd to find out if there was any substance behind the allegations. What the lawyer produced is known as the Dowd Report: "225 pages cataloging alleged baseball-related gambling, with an added 7 volumes of betting slips, some supposedly with Rose's fingerprints, numerous suspicious phone calls to bookmakers, and other data" (D7). More specifically, the report claimed that Rose had bet on 52 Reds games in 1987 at no less than $10,000 a day (Carter). James Reston Jr., author of the authoritative book on Rose called Collision at Home Plate, said that "between the handwriting and fingerprint evidence, the fact that Rose bet on baseball on at least two occasions is absolutely and incontrovertibly established" (Schneider D2). Due to the amount of incriminating evidence, Rose accepted a lifetime ban handed to him by Commissioner Giamatti in 1989.