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- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2012 8:00 pm
More fun facts about Pete Rose:
1. Rose would place an average of four to five bets from the clubhouse before every game, usually just about 15-20 minutes before game time. Was his mind on the game he was managing, or was it on his bets?
2. He was a lousy bettor, losing far more money than the average bettor does per dollar wagered. And he wagered a LOT of dollars.
3. This meant that bookies viewed him as a bit of a pigeon, and after a while, he built up hundreds of thousands in debts to various bookies, some of whom began to blackmail him when he stiffed them on payment.
4. When you owe bookmakers hundreds of thousands of dollars, they start to feel like they own you--and maybe they do. When a manager is owned by bookies—or in so much debt to bookies that they start to govern his behavior—that can't be a good thing.
5. After his banning from baseball was announced, some of his players admitted they had been appalled by many of the sleazy pals (e.g. gamblers) Rose had brought around the clubhouse.
6. The Reds were 59-66 (.472) when Rose got canned in the middle of the 1989 season. The following year, under Lou Piniella, the same players turned things around and won the World Series.
Ok. I'm done with Charlie Hustle for now....
1. Rose would place an average of four to five bets from the clubhouse before every game, usually just about 15-20 minutes before game time. Was his mind on the game he was managing, or was it on his bets?
2. He was a lousy bettor, losing far more money than the average bettor does per dollar wagered. And he wagered a LOT of dollars.
3. This meant that bookies viewed him as a bit of a pigeon, and after a while, he built up hundreds of thousands in debts to various bookies, some of whom began to blackmail him when he stiffed them on payment.
4. When you owe bookmakers hundreds of thousands of dollars, they start to feel like they own you--and maybe they do. When a manager is owned by bookies—or in so much debt to bookies that they start to govern his behavior—that can't be a good thing.
5. After his banning from baseball was announced, some of his players admitted they had been appalled by many of the sleazy pals (e.g. gamblers) Rose had brought around the clubhouse.
6. The Reds were 59-66 (.472) when Rose got canned in the middle of the 1989 season. The following year, under Lou Piniella, the same players turned things around and won the World Series.
Ok. I'm done with Charlie Hustle for now....