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- <text id=89TT1817>
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- <title>
- July 10, 1989: Pete Rose:Why Pick On Pete?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Cover Stories
- July 10, 1989 You Bet Your Life:Pete Rose
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 16
- COVER STORY: Why Pick On Pete?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Charlie Hustle has become the symbol of America's tolerance of
- gambling--and the cost of an obsession
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church
- </p>
- <p> He was born with the talent to swing a bat, of course; no
- way could he have ever compiled 4,256 hits, the all-time career
- record, without it. But it was not his inborn gift that made
- Pete Rose the symbol of what Americans consider a vital part of
- the national ethos. He was Charlie Hustle, the man who ran out
- even his bases on balls, who played with a boyish exuberance and
- devil-may-care abandon characterized by the belly-flop,
- headfirst slides that kept his uniform constantly dirty. He
- soared far beyond athletes who had vastly more natural grace.
- A whole generation of fathers told their Little League sons to
- play like Rose if they wanted to get the most out of their
- ability.
- </p>
- <p> Soon some of those sons may be telling their sons that they
- had better not imitate Rose's off-the-field behavior. For in
- the past few weeks Rose has become a very different kind of
- symbol--still characteristic of American values, but this time
- of values hardly anyone likes to admit harboring. Charlie Hustle
- is well on his way to becoming Charlie Hustler, an emblem of the
- gambling fever that is sweeping America. This year Americans
- will spend an estimated $278 billion on everything from
- state-run lotteries to church-run bingo. The big question for
- millions of American sports fans today is not "What's the
- score?" but "What are the odds?"
- </p>
- <p> Compulsive gamblers across the country instantly recognize
- the pattern of acts alleged in an investigative report to
- Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti and in interviews
- with Rose's associates: bets on ten to 20 college basketball
- games at a time, losses of $400,000 to just one bookie in one
- spring, desperate borrowing to pay the debts, equally desperate
- searches for new bookmakers to replace those who would no longer
- extend Rose credit or even take his bets.
- </p>
- <p> The accusations come from runners who say they placed his
- bets and from a former bookie who insists he took them, but
- Rose declares it is all part of a conspiracy to blackmail him.
- He admits having bet on horse races, football and college- and
- pro-basketball games since 1975. But he vociferously denies the
- central charge: that in 1985, 1986 and 1987 he bet anywhere from
- $2,000 to $5,000 on baseball games, including those played by
- his own team, the Cincinnati Reds. He played both infield and
- outfield for the Reds for more than 18 years and since 1984 has
- been the team's manager.
- </p>
- <p> Members of the self-help group Gamblers Anonymous, who see
- Rose as one of them, nod and say, aha, his reaction sounds like
- another part of the classic pattern: denial. There is an ancient
- gag among Gamblers Anonymous members: "How do you know when a
- compulsive gambler is lying? When you see his lips move."
- </p>
- <p> For the moment, Rose has managed to delay a disciplinary
- hearing at which Giamatti could suspend him from baseball for
- a year (if he was found to have bet on any games at all) or for
- life (if he bet on his own team--even to win). Norbert A.
- Nadel, a judge of Ohio's Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas,
- opened last week by issuing a temporary restraining order
- barring Giamatti from holding the hearing, which had been
- scheduled for Monday. In what many critics denounced as a
- hometown ruling by a judge soon up for re-election, Nadel
- declared that Giamatti was so biased against Rose that the Reds'
- manager could not get a fair hearing. Nadel this week will
- conduct another hearing on a motion for an injunction to bar the
- Giamatti proceeding indefinitely. Even if Nadel issues the
- injunction, baseball lawyers are certain to appeal. Legal
- experts give them an excellent chance of winning; Nadel's
- initial ruling broke a long tradition of courts' staying out of
- professional disciplinary affairs.
- </p>
- <p> Under orders from the Ohio Supreme Court, Nadel reluctantly
- made public the 225-page investigative report to Giamatti
- prepared by John Dowd, a former U.S. Justice Department
- attorney. Dowd's case is somewhat weakened because it depends
- heavily on the testimony of Ron Peters and Paul Janszen, two
- convicted felons. But Dowd insisted that their stories were
- corroborated by other witnesses, by tape recordings, by records
- of Rose's telephone calls and, most important, by betting sheets
- that a retired FBI expert judged to be in Rose's handwriting.
- Rose said he could not identify them.
- </p>
- <p> For a good many baseball fans--and gamblers--whether
- Rose can ever convincingly refute the allegations is almost
- irrelevant. Charlie Hustle has become a symbol not just of
- gambling but also of the social toleration of it. Many people
- declare belligerently that even if all the allegations are true,
- they cannot see that Rose did anything grievously wrong. Had he
- bet on the Reds to lose, he would deserve severe punishment. But
- the Dowd report asserts that so far as anyone can determine,
- Rose bet on his team only to win--and, many people ask, What
- was so terrible about that?
- </p>
- <p> This sentiment, of course, is strongest in Cincinnati,
- where Rose is still a sort of god (Riverfront Stadium, where the
- Reds play, stands on Pete Rose Way). But those opinions can be
- heard all over the country. In a TIME/CNN poll taken last week
- by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, only 30% of the 504 people
- questioned thought Rose should be suspended from baseball for
- life if the accusations are correct; 40% said he should be
- suspended for only one year; and 20% were against any suspension
- at all.
- </p>
- <p> Baseball's argument is that betting on one's own team
- corrupts the game. At minimum, it puts the bettor in touch with--and all too likely in debt to--gamblers, who may well want
- to pervert competition for their own ends. At worst, it gives
- the bettor a financial stake in trying harder to win some games,
- those on which he has money riding, than others. But to many
- people this stern morality is as outdated as the 70-year-old
- scandal that prompted it. In 1919 eight members of the Chicago
- White Sox were charged with taking money from gamblers to throw
- the World Series against, yes, the Cincinnati Reds. The rules
- that Rose is accused of breaking were written in the wake of
- that scandal. Said a typical telephone caller to a Cincinnati
- radio talk show last week: "It's not like he's a criminal or
- anything."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, betting on sporting events other than horse or dog
- races or jai alai is generally a crime in every state except
- Nevada. But by now the prohibition, like many other
- antigambling laws, is hardly ever enforced. Betting goes on so
- openly that all but a handful of newspaper sports pages print
- the odds on baseball, football and basketball games. During the
- football season, the New York Daily News publishes four regular
- and two rotating columnists who offer weekly advice on which pro
- and college games to bet; its columns bristle with ads touting
- betting services offering the same assistance. Asks Bobby
- Knight, basketball coach of Indiana University: "Why don't the
- newspapers run whores' phone numbers? Is betting on basketball,
- football or baseball less illegal than prostitution?"
- </p>
- <p> Sports betting is not even the largest or fastest-growing
- type of gambling. Christiansen/Cummings Associates in New York
- City, a leading consulting firm to the gaming industry, figures
- that all kinds of wagering (except friendly bets between
- individuals) have increased a thumping 57% in the past five
- years. Casinos took in more than half of all bets, or $164
- billion; sports gambling was a distant second with a $28 billion
- take, up 57% from 1983. Though impressive, that increase was
- dwarfed by a 98% jump in the coins clinked into slot machines,
- a 103% rise in legal bookmaking and a 228% leap in money wagered
- in cardrooms.
- </p>
- <p> Even those figures understate the spread of gambling fever.
- The biggest jump is in gambling that state and local
- governments not merely tolerate but promote. By next January,
- lotteries will be operating in 32 states and the District of
- Columbia, including four states--Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky and
- Minnesota--whose voters approved them in referendums last
- November. In 1964 only one state, New Hampshire, had a lottery.
- Christiansen/Cummings figures that the lotteries took in $17
- billion last year, up 230% from 1983. As the lotteries have
- proliferated, so have the jackpots: Pennsylvania's $115.5
- million drawing in April prompted bettors from Long Beach,
- Calif.; Long Island, N.Y.; and points between to flock to the
- Keystone State, where many stood in line for hours to buy
- tickets. A few years ago, a $5 million lottery prize was
- front-page news in most of the country; today it barely rates
- a paragraph on page 27.
- </p>
- <p> Legal gambling has spread into some of the most straitlaced
- parts of the nation. Take Iowa: six years ago, even church
- bingo games were illegal there. Now Iowa residents have some of
- the widest choices available in legal gambling. They can buy
- tickets in either the state lottery or Lotto America, an
- organization that some experts think may be the nucleus of a
- national lottery; it currently operates in eight states and the
- District of Columbia and expects to sign up two more states this
- summer. Iowans can also bet at one horse track and three dog
- tracks, and in two years they will be able to become riverboat
- gamblers. This spring the state legislature approved a 1991
- start for wagering on vessels plying the Mississippi.
- </p>
- <p> Legal gambling begets more of the same in states that fear
- they will lose money if they do not devise new ways of
- wagering. Illinois, for example, operates a giant lottery that
- is believed to siphon much money out of neighboring states. But,
- fearful that some cash might eventually flow back to Iowa,
- Illinois House Democrats have recommended starting roulette,
- blackjack and dice games on twelve paddleboats cruising six
- rivers that flow through or past the state.
- </p>
- <p> Even Indian tribes are raking in money by conducting legal
- gambling. Congress last fall passed a law making it easier for
- Indians on reservations to institute any type of gambling that
- is legal in the states where the reservations are located. The
- most popular reservation game is high-stakes bingo. Near
- Franklin, La., 1,200 people every Saturday night jam into a $2
- million bingo hall built last September on the Chitimacha Indian
- Reservation; that is four times the number of Indians living on
- the reservation. Each player pays a $45 admission fee and gets
- twelve bingo cards. The payoff on each winning card is $1,000;
- total prizes every night are at least $40,000. That tops the
- church bingo games that prompted an ancient wheeze: "Did you
- hear about the Cadillac dealer? He won a Catholic church in a
- bingo game."
- </p>
- <p> Legal gambling also prompts more illegal wagering. It was
- once thought that lotteries and other state-run betting ventures
- would pull money away from ghetto numbers games, horse parlors
- operating behind candy-store fronts and the like. But the
- illegal games usually flourish alongside the legal ones and
- sometimes even piggyback on them. One example: since the
- Illinois lottery began daily drawings, Chicago numbers operators
- have adopted the state's winning number as the winning number
- in their own daily drawings. Since the state number is regularly
- aired on television, the numbers runners are saved the trouble
- of calculating a winning number of their own and communicating
- it to their clients. But why should anybody break the law to bet
- money that could just as easily be wagered legally? Well, the
- numbers operators sell tickets for as little as 25 cents, in
- contrast to $1 for state lottery tickets, and the illegal game
- offers better odds. In general, odds in the state lotteries are
- the worst of any type of gambling. Atlantic City casinos, for
- example, are required by New Jersey law to return as winnings
- 75% of the money bet, but state lotteries generally return only
- 51%.
- </p>
- <p> If there is one opinion on which both gambling experts and
- ordinary bettors are in unanimous agreement, it is that
- state-sponsored gambling has been the driving force behind the
- huge increases in all types of wagering, legal and illegal.
- Legislators who approve lotteries, legal horse-betting parlors
- or riverboat gambling are spreading the message that wagering
- is respectable. "Gambling has been part of every known society,"
- says Dr. Eric Plaut, vice chairman of the department of
- psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University
- Medical School, Evanston, Ill. "What has changed in the past
- decade is that it is now publicly endorsed. Since the government
- has got into the business of being an operator of gambling
- itself, it has given (betting) an imprimatur." A 60-year-old
- former bookie and member of Gamblers Anonymous in Los Angeles
- who gives his name only as Freddy S. says, "All these states
- have the lottery. All these housewives and welfare recipients
- are going to get hooked. Kids aren't going to get diapers and
- food. You can pick up almost any newspaper now and get the lines
- (odds on sporting events). You couldn't do that in my day; you
- had to pay for that service. All this information, it's just too
- accessible. It's just too easy (to bet) now."
- </p>
- <p> Freddy's grim vision has not quite come true yet, but the
- extent of gambling among the American people is already as
- striking as the figures on the amount of money they bet. Dr.
- Howard Shaffer of Harvard's Center for Addiction Studies figures
- that the proportion of American adults who bet at least
- occasionally has risen from 60% two decades ago to 80% now;
- other estimates range up to 88%. Nor is betting confined to
- adults: Henry Lesieur, a sociologist at St. John's University
- in New York City, found in a 1987 study that 86% of New Jersey
- high school students had gambled within the previous year and
- 32% gambled at least once a week, mostly on sports events. "At
- first I didn't believe the rates," says Lesieur. "We
- double-checked and found that, if anything, we were
- conservative."
- </p>
- <p> Some experts credit modern technology with contributing to
- the gambling surge. Computers have made possible the
- instantaneous distribution of odds on any kind of race or ball
- game anywhere in the country; bettors can watch the performance
- of the horses or teams they follow on cable television.
- Lotteries sell tickets through player-activated computer
- terminals; churches and charities offer computerized bingo
- readers. "The new technology makes gambling much more
- accessible, and it speeds everything up," says Richard
- Rosenthal, a Beverly Hills psychoanalyst who specializes in
- treating compulsive gamblers. "It makes gambling much more
- addictive."
- </p>
- <p> For the great majority of players who bet only
- occasionally, or regularly but lightly, gambling is no more than
- an inexpensive amusement. For others, it ruins lives quite as
- thoroughly as alcohol or drugs. Some of their stories:
- </p>
- <p> Marc, 35, began gambling in high school, where he blew a
- $1,000 savings account his parents had set up for him. In
- college he gambled away the receipts of a candy store that he
- managed; in law school he looted his wife's $4,000 savings
- account. Says Marc: "I would lie awake at night and relive every
- race, every game, to figure out where I miscalculated." He never
- did figure it out; by 1985 he had run up debts of $200,000 and
- joined Gamblers Anonymous. Family and friends thought he had
- kicked his habit, but in fact he had simply run out of money.
- In 1987, as his insurance business began to recover, Marc
- started going to the track again. He conned his wife into
- letting him take out a second mortgage on their home, telling
- her it was for investment; he lost the money gambling. His wife
- threatened divorce, and a business acquaintance from whom he had
- borrowed money that he did not repay clubbed him over the head.
- That is why Marc has a steel plate in his head. After a failed
- suicide attempt, he entered a self-help group at Tampa's
- Glenbeigh Hospital and thinks this time he really has quit
- gambling. Says Marc: "I'm a miracle. Most people that get in as
- deep I did either end up dead, in prison or alone."
- </p>
- <p> Howie, 53, board chairman of a Los Angeles advertising
- agency, has been earning good money legitimately since age 15,
- when he already owned a Long Island, N.Y., parking lot. Says he:
- "I used to walk around with $10,000 in my pocket, but my
- father-in-law had to pay the $300 mortgage each month." In New
- York he would borrow $30,000 to $50,000 a week and lose about
- 80% of it over a weekend. "Then I'd steal," he says. Sometimes
- he would pilfer racks of dresses off the streets in Manhattan's
- garment district and sell them in a back alley. He adds,
- "There's plenty of times I've taken a gun and held up people--and I'm a white-collar person." Fleeing to California to escape
- bill collectors, he started a successful garment business in Los
- Angeles but continued betting beyond his means; eventually he
- was arrested by FBI agents. Says he: "That night I called
- Gamblers Anonymous."
- </p>
- <p> Karen, 42, began gambling at age eight, flipping baseball
- cards against garage doors. At 13, she shot craps with boys in
- the co-ed locker room of Ralston Junior High in Belmont, Calif.
- As a young married woman, she started going to Las Vegas and the
- poker tables at Gardena, Calif. "All of a sudden, it wasn't the
- money anymore," she says. "It was the action, the high." On one
- occasion, she told her young son to wait on a street corner
- after school, and she would pick him up at 2:30 p.m. for a
- dental appointment. She went to Gardena instead, and her husband
- found the boy at 6 p.m., still waiting. On another day, she
- locked her house and went to Gardena, figuring she would be back
- in time to let her daughter in when the girl came home from
- school at 3 p.m. Hours later Karen was still in Gardena, and her
- husband found the shivering daughter waiting on the porch in a
- hard rain. Finally, her husband told Karen, "I love you, and the
- kids love you, but we can't take this anymore. If you don't get
- yourself some help, you're not going to be here for Christmas."
- Karen joined G.A. Though the great majority of gamblers are men,
- women are betting--and showing up at Gamblers Anonymous
- meetings--with growing frequency.
- </p>
- <p> All of which makes the Pete Rose story more than a gossipy
- tale about the downfall of an idol. Whether or not he bet on
- baseball, the last thing America's growing legion of gamblers
- needs is an example of an admitted heavy bettor blithely denying
- he has done anything wrong and actually commanding the sympathy
- of people who continue to worship him. The lure of excessive
- gambling is too great, even without an exemplar of Rose's
- stature. Painful as it may be for the millions who admired him
- as a ballplayer, he should be punished as severely as an
- objective hearing may determine he deserves. It would help
- enormously if he would admit his compulsion and seek
- rehabilitative help. Perhaps then the nation could forget about
- Rose the Gambler and go back to its once well-justified
- admiration of Charlie Hustle.
- </p>
- <p>-- Richard Behar/New York, Lee Griggs/Chicago and James
- Willwerth/Los Angeles
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-