Pete Rose Night
May 14, 2025
Pete Rose Night at Great American Ball Park
43,585 members of Reds Country gathered on May 14, a majority of whom donned the No. 14 replica jersey provided to fans that evening, to celebrate the legacy of the Hit King with the club’s Pete Rose Night.
The sold-out contest against the Chicago White Sox featured many nods to the late Rose’s significance to his teammates and Cincinnati both before and during the game.
A Q&A moderated by Hall of Fame broadcaster Marty Brennaman featured Reds Hall of Famers George Foster, Barry Larkin and Eric Davis who shared stories of Charlie Hustle. A video tribute from Terry Francona and others, an Honor Guard presentation, a 14-second moment of remembrance, and the national anthem performed by 14 students from Rose’s alma mater helped dedicate the Reds’ pregame to the Hit King.
All of this was only made better with Rose’s family participating in the festivities, including Pete’s grandchildren serving as honorary captains, participating in the game ball delivery and throwing a ceremonial first pitch.
Throughout the Reds’ tilt with the White Sox, Rose’s iconic moments were displayed on ballpark videoboards for Reds Country to relive the three-time World Series champion’s












“Pete Rose Field” Dedicated at Boldface Park
Hours before a night full of celebration and remembrance at Great American Ball Park, the late Pete Rose’s memory was forever engraved at Boldface Park with a baseball field dedicated to the Cincinnati baseball legend.
The park, located in the Sedamsville neighborhood, was christened “Pete Rose Field” on May 14 in collaboration between the city of Cincinnati, the Cincinnati Reds and the Cincinnati Recreation Commission (CRC) while the family of Charlie Hustle was in attendance.
Rose’s daughter, Fawn Rose, was joined in sharing words by Cincinnati vice mayor Jan-Michele Lemon Kearney, Reds president and CEO Phil Castellini, CRC president Pat O’Callaghan, CRC recreation director Daniel Betts and president of Sedamsville Civic Association Cindy Bastin. The newly dedicated park, located 4.5 miles from GABP, is where Rose grew up playing baseball.






Pete Rose Visitation at Great American Ball Park
On Sunday, November 10, 2024, the family of Pete Rose hosted a 14-hour visitation at Great American Ball Park. Thousands of Reds fans came through the gates to pay their respects and say goodbye to the “Hit King,” with Pete’s daughter Fawn among the family members greeting every visitor.










Rose's Career
The most prolific hitter in baseball history, Cincinnati native Pete Rose wore the uniform of his hometown Reds from 1963 to 1978 and again from 1984 to 1986. Rose's local roots, hustling style, and long list of achievements made him one of the most popular players in Reds history.
Rose ranks at the top of the Reds' all-time franchise list in games played (2722), plate appearances (12,344), runs scored (1741), hits (3358), singles (2490), doubles (601), total bases (4645) and bases on balls (1210). Only three players in Reds history have driven in more career runs than Rose's 1036; only three players hit more triples in their Reds careers than Rose's 115.
Rose's Reds career was marked by virtually every honor that can be bestowed on a Major League player. His 13 All-Star selections as a Red is the second-most in club history, and includes selections at an All-Star-record five different positions. In 1963 Rose was named the National League's Rookie of the Year, and he was selected as the Most Valuable Player of the National League in 1973. A three-time NL batting champion, Rose was also a two-time winner of Gold Glove Awards for defensive excellence.
In 1975 and 1976, Rose captained the Big Red Machine to consecutive World Series titles and was named the Most Valuable Player of the 1975 Fall Classic. In 1978, Rose authored a 44-game hitting streak, tied for the second-longest single-season streak in Major League history.
Rose played for the Phillies and Expos from 1979 until August 16, 1984 when he returned to the Reds in a trade. On September 11, 1985, Rose singled in the bottom of the first inning of the Reds' game against the Padres for the 4192nd hit of his Major League career -- which broke the career hit record held by Ty Cobb. Rose finished his career with 4,256 hits.
Pete Rose Through the Years




















