List of people banned from Major League Baseball

A ban from Major League Baseball is a form of punishment levied by the Office of the Commissioner of Major League Baseball (MLB) against a player, manager, executive, or other person connected with the league as a denunciation of some action that person committed that violated or tarnished the integrity of the game. A banned person is forbidden from employment with MLB or its affiliated minor leagues, and is forbidden from other professional involvement with MLB such as acting as a sports agent for an MLB player. Since 1991, all banned people – whether living or deceased – have been barred from induction to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Major League Baseball has maintained a list of "permanently ineligible" people since Kenesaw Mountain Landis was installed as the first Commissioner of Baseball in 1920. Although the majority of banned persons were banned after the establishment of the Commissioner's office, a few were banned prior to that time. Most persons who have been banned (including many who have been reinstated) were banned due to association with gambling or otherwise conspiring to fix the outcomes of games; others have been banned for a multitude of reasons including illegal activities off the field, violating some term of their playing contract, or making disparaging remarks that cast the game in a bad light.

Contents

History

Before 1920, players were banned by the decision of a committee. There were 14 banned from 1865–1920; of those, 12 were banned for association with gambling or attempting to fix games, one was banned for violating the reserve clause, and one was banned for making disparaging remarks.

In 1920, team owners established the Office of the Commissioner of Baseball, ostensibly to keep the players in line and out of corruption's way. Kenesaw Mountain Landis, a federal judge, was the owners' ideal candidate for the job and was given unlimited power over the game, including the authority to ban people from the game. He banned many players and various others, often for very small offenses, and at times almost indiscriminately. In his 24 years as commissioner, Landis banned more people than all of his successors combined.

Since Landis' death in 1944, only one person who was banned by one of his successors has not been reinstated: Pete Rose. In 1991, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum voted to bar banned players from induction. In 2005, as a result of the findings of the Mitchell Report, the Major League Baseball Players Association stipulated that multiple violations of the new Major League Baseball drug policy would result in a lifetime ban.[1]

Punishment

A person who has been banned from Major League Baseball is barred from:

Terms such as "lifetime ban" and "permanent ban" are misnomers, as a banned person may be reinstated (i.e., have the ban removed) on the decision of the Commissioner of Major League Baseball, and in the case of Hall of Fame induction the ban can extend beyond a person's lifetime. Additionally, a ban does not forbid a person from participating in baseball leagues that are not affiliated with MLB.

List of banned people

People banned before 1920

People banned under Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis

  • "Shoeless" Joe Jackson. (The precise extent of Jackson's involvement is a controversial question, though it is indisputable that he took $5,000 cash (equal to $63,494 today) from the gamblers and never told anyone about it until after the conspiracy was exposed. He also told the grand jury that he did not field or hit as well in key situations as he could have)
  • Eddie Cicotte. (The story that Cicotte (pronounced Suh-kot-e) had been promised a $10,000 bonus (equal to $126,988 today) if he won 30 games and then was denied two starts at the end of the season is unsubstantiated)
  • Lefty Williams lost all three of his starts in the World Series, setting a record that has never been matched.
  • Chick Gandil was the mastermind and ringleader of the scandal.
  • Fred McMullin was only a backup infielder. However, he overheard teammates discussing the fix and threatened to report them unless he was included.
  • Swede Risberg was one of the ringleaders of the scandal.
  • Happy Felsch hit and fielded poorly in the series.
  • Buck Weaver was banned because he knew of the conspiracy, but did not report it to MLB authorities and team ownership; Weaver successfully sued owner Charles Comiskey for his 1921 salary.

People banned under Commissioner Bowie Kuhn

After Landis died in 1944, there was a long lull before the next banishment; indeed, during Bowie Kuhn's tenure (1969–1984), only three players (or former players) were banned for life.

People banned under Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti

A. Bartlett Giamatti spent less than six months as Commissioner of Baseball before he died unexpectedly of a heart attack.

His death came a mere eight days after banning Pete Rose, manager of the Cincinnati Reds, for life. Rose was investigated in 1989 for his alleged ties to gamblers; when new information on Rose's gambling habits came to light, Giamatti banned Rose. (While president of the National League in 1988, Giamatti suspended Rose for thirty games for shoving an umpire during a heated argument)

However, Giamatti granted Rose one concession: Rose could apply for reinstatement once a year for as long as he lived. Rose has subsequently applied for reinstatement four times; all four reinstatement requests have been rejected. After years of denial, Rose admitted that "everything" the Dowd Report contained was the complete, unadulterated truth.[3]

People banned under Commissioner Fay Vincent

Fay Vincent became commissioner upon the death of Giamatti.

People banned under Commissioner Bud Selig

Bud Selig became Commissioner after Fay Vincent's resignation; he was Acting Commissioner between 1992–1998, and was elected to the Office of Commissioner in 1998.

See also

References

  1. ^ "MLB, MLBPA announce new drug agreement". MLBPA Official Press Release. 15 November 2005. http://mlb.mlb.com/pa/releases/releases.jsp?content=111505. Retrieved 21 July 2010. 
  2. ^ Spokane Spokesman-Review, October 20, 1983, "Kuhn called off-base for Mantle, Mays bans".
  3. ^ Associated Press, March 16, 2007 "Rose admits to betting on Reds 'every night'"

External links