Pete Rose Blasts Cincinnati Reds Ownership for Horrendous Offseason Moves

CINCINNATI, OH - JUNE 24: Cincinnati Reds great Pete Rose is honored, along with his teammates from the 1976 World Series Championship team, prior to the start of the game between the Cincinnati Reds and the San Diego Padres at Great American Ball Park on June 24, 2016 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images)

Pete Rose was once the manager of the Cincinnati Reds, one of the most prestigious teams in Major League Baseball. Two of the team’s five World Series championships and four of its nine National League pennants were won by him and the Big Red Machine.

But in more than 30 years, the Redlegs haven’t added anything new to their trophy case. When the schedules are released, other teams now jot them down as surefire winners instead of the team who used to terrorize its opponents.

However, this regular season has been among the worst for the squad in recent memory. Cincinnati has been in the news for all the wrong reasons following an ugly offseason in which the front management severed ways with nearly every quality player on the squad. Presently, one of the most recognizable figures in the history of the organization has a lot to say regarding ownership and its choices.

Rose is not pleased with how the franchise is going.

Pete Rose criticized the Reds of Cincinnati.

Since 1996, the Reds have been a perpetual underdog; they have only four postseason appearances and have won 0 postseason series. They only made two successful seasons attempts in 2020 and 2021, but Cincy’s ownership chose to blow everything up after the team finished the previous season with 83 wins, their highest since 2013.

The organization decided not to contact All-Star outfielder and fan favorite Nick Castellanos, even if he might have wanted to stay in the Queen City.

The slugger signed a contract with the Philadelphia Phillies as a result of it. Along with starting pitchers Sonny Gray and Wade Miley, the Reds also dealt former All-Star Eugenio Suarez and 2021 All-Star Jesse Winker to the Seattle Mariners.

 

How has everything turned out thus far? Cincinnati, which has lost 17 of its first 17 games, has emerged as baseball’s worst team. Due to his absurd remarks made prior to the team’s home opener, President Phil Castellini is currently the team’s greatest public opponent.

 

 

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