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Sources: 49ers trade WR Samuel to Commanders

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 01 March 2025 17:07

The San Francisco 49ers have agreed to send standout wide receiver Deebo Samuel to the Washington Commanders in exchange for a fifth-round pick, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Saturday night.

Like any trade agreed to now, this deal cannot be processed until the new league year begins March 12. As part of the deal, Washington is taking on the remainder of Samuel's contract and paying his full $17.55 million salary for the 2025 season, sources told Schefter.

Defensive tackle Jonathan Allen was part of the trade discussion between the Commanders and 49ers this week as they executed the Samuel deal, a source told ESPN's Jeremy Fowler later Saturday. Ultimately, Allen, who is due $16.4 million, was not included.

For the Commanders, they've added another weapon for quarterback Jayden Daniels, trading for a former All-Pro receiver. The move ended an often productive but at times tumultuous six-year run for Samuel with San Francisco.

San Francisco will absorb a $31,550,012 dead money hit on this year's salary cap. Samuel, who has one year remaining on his contract, will count $17.5 million on Washington's salary cap. It's possible the Commanders extend his deal.

Originally selected in the second round of the 2019 NFL draft, Samuel instantly became a favorite of coach Kyle Shanahan, who maximized Samuel's versatile skill set by lining him up all over the field and getting him the ball in a variety of ways. In his first six years, Samuel has 4,792 yards receiving and 1,143 yards rushing. In the past four years, he's rushed for 958 yards and 17 touchdowns while catching 244 passes for 3,599 yards and 18 touchdowns.

He had a dominant 2021 season, nearly carrying the 49ers' offense to the Super Bowl. He had 1,770 scrimmage yards and 14 total touchdowns as the Niners came up short in the NFC Championship Game against the Los Angeles Rams.

Following that All-Pro season, Samuel made his first trade request as he and the Niners were embroiled in a contract dispute. San Francisco fielded offers for Samuel at the 2022 NFL draft but didn't get anything near what it wanted and signed Samuel to a three-year, $71.5 million extension.

Samuel has struggled to regain that form, averaging 56 receptions for 731.3 receiving yards and four touchdowns with 40 carries for 197.7 yards and three touchdowns over the past three seasons.

Samuel then made public his latest trade request, telling Schefter on Super Bowl Sunday of his desire to play elsewhere. 49ers general manager John Lynch said at the scouting combine they would honor that request.

Samuel joins a team that is aware of his talent. Commanders general manager Adam Peters was an assistant general manager in San Francisco when the team drafted Samuel. Peters left the organization after last season to join Washington.

Also, Commanders run game coordinator Anthony Lynn was 49ers' assistant head coach/running backs in 2022-23.

Washington's offense ranked fifth in scoring and seventh in yards last season -- the first time it has finished top 10 in both categories since 2012 -- leading the team to the NFC Championship Game.

But four of the Commanders top six receivers from 2024 are pending free agents.

They also lacked a consistent second option alongside Pro Bowl receiver Terry McLaurin. Multiple players filled that role last season: Noah Brown, Dyami Brown and Olamide Zaccheaus. All three are potential free agents.

Washington averaged 5.1 yards after the catch last season, ranking 21st. Samuel has excelled on underneath routes and averages 9.0 yards after the catch for his career.

That should only help Daniels, who was the runaway Offensive Rookie of the Year. He threw for 3,568 yards and 25 touchdowns.

Samuel finished 2024 with 806 scrimmages yards and four touchdowns, both of which were career lows (save for a 2020 season in which he played just seven games). He dealt with calf, wrist, oblique and rib injuries and had an illness that cost him two games and parts of others.

Perhaps most alarming for the Niners was Samuel's rushing production dropped dramatically. After averaging 6.2 yards per carry when he emerged as the Niners' "wide back" in 2021, he managed just 3.2 yards in 2024.

Samuel's frustration with his and the team's struggles boiled over a couple of times in 2024. In a November win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Samuel confronted kicker Jake Moody after his third missed field goal of the game. When long snapper Taybor Pepper stepped in to defend Moody, it led to a back and forth with some minor shoves before the sides were separated.

After that game, Samuel said he was "just frustrated in the heat of battle" and "kind of got out of character a little bit."

In December, Samuel tweeted that he was "not struggling at all just not getting the ball!" as complaints about his lack of production began to accumulate.

Speaking to media the day after the season ended in January, Samuel said he "had no questions at all" about his future in San Francisco. As it turned out, Samuel would again request a trade in his season-ending meeting with Shanahan.

"It was a hard conversation to have with Kyle because of the relationship that we have," Samuel told Schefter. "But I have to do what's best. I'm more than thankful for the Niners giving me the opportunity of a lifetime but now I think it's best that we find another team."

Now that Samuel has moved on, the 49ers again find themselves in need of more help in a wide receiver room full of questions.

Brandon Aiyuk is coming off a torn right ACL and MCL and it's unclear when he will be cleared to return to practice. Jauan Jennings emerged as the team's most productive wideout in 2023 but is entering the final year of his contract, and rookie Ricky Pearsall flashed late-season promise but is still largely unproven.

Despite those questions, Lynch made it clear that the Samuel-49ers relationship had run its course and the time for a divorce was near. On Saturday, it arrived.

"He is a great player," Lynch said. "I think often one of my favorite draft picks of my time. He makes plays, and he makes game-changing plays. Everything is good. But I think at some point, time happens, and he asked for that."

Sources: Miller, Clips agree to 4-year, $8.3M deal

Published in Basketball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 17:02

The LA Clippers and two-way guard Jordan Miller have agreed to a four-year, $8.3 million contract, sources told ESPN.

The Clippers announced the signing on Saturday but didn't reveal deal terms.

Miller, the Clippers' 2023 second-rounder, has starred for the franchise's San Diego NBA G League affiliate and now earns a standard deal, including over $1 million for the last 6 weeks of season.

Miller has averaged 4.7 points in 30 games this season.

To make room for Miller, the Clippers were waiving forward MarJon Beauchamp to create roster space, sources told ESPN. Beauchamp averaged 2.2 points in 29 games.

Butler sitting out vs. 76ers due to back spasms

Published in Basketball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 17:02

PHILADELPHIA -- The Golden State Warriors will play their first game without Jimmy Butler, who will miss Saturday night's game against the Philadelphia 76ers because of back spasms.

Head coach Steve Kerr said Butler began experiencing back issues when he took a hit from Orlando's Wendell Carter Jr. during the Warriors' 121-115 win over the Magic on Thursday.

With Butler in the lineup, the Warriors were 7-1 since acquiring him before the trade deadline. Butler sat out Golden State's first game immediately after the trade, which the team lost to the Los Angeles Lakers.

But the Warriors have played their best basketball since with Butler on the floor, winning five straight heading into Saturday.

The Warriors have said their goal is to secure the sixth seed in the playoffs and avoid the play-in. They went into Saturday's game tied with the Clippers with a 32-27 record.

In addition to Butler, the Warriors were missing Jonathan Kuminga, who remains out with an ankle injury but continues to work his way back.

NBA to settle Raptors-Knicks case at July hearing

Published in Basketball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 17:02

The NBA will hold an arbitration hearing during the week of July 21 for commissioner Adam Silver to settle the long-running legal dispute between the Toronto Raptors and New York Knicks, according to a court filing Saturday in New York that was obtained by ESPN.

That hearing will fall almost two years after the Knicks sued the Raptors in August 2023, alleging the theft of thousands of confidential files. And it will come almost a year after the New York judge overseeing the case ruled in June 2024 that Silver should resolve the dispute.

From the start, the Raptors asked for Silver to step in, but the Knicks, who sought more than $10 million in damages, expressed concerns about Silver's ability to remain impartial, arguing that he should stay on the sidelines partly because of his close relationship with Raptors governor Larry Tanenbaum, who also is chairman of the NBA board of governors.

The Knicks, Raptors and NBA didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

In the initial complaint, the Knicks alleged that the Raptors poached Ikechukwu Azotam, who worked for New York from 2020 to 2023, and ordered him to provide a trove of internal information after Toronto began recruiting him in the summer of 2023. The Knicks argued that this effort was geared toward giving the Raptors a competitive advantage.

The Knicks alleged that Azotam -- who worked for the Knicks as an assistant video coordinator, then as a director of video/analytics/player development assistant -- sent the Raptors thousands of confidential files, including play frequency reports, a prep book for the 2022-23 season, video scouting files and opposition research.

The Knicks also alleged that Azotam did so at the request of the Raptors, whom they said were trying to "organize, plan, and structure the new coaching and video operations staff," the August 2023 complaint stated.

The Raptors, Azotam, Toronto head coach Darko Rajaković, player development coach Noah Lewis and 10 "unknown" employees were listed as defendants in the lawsuit.

In an October 2023 court filing, the Raptors called the Knicks' allegations "baseless" and a "public relations stunt" while asking for Silver to step in. The Raptors also argued that the "alleged 'theft of data' involved little more than publicly available information compiled through public sources readily accessible to all NBA Members."

The lawsuit itself marks a rare instance of one professional team suing another. The only other instance ESPN research could uncover involving two NBA teams was a legal battle between the Knicks and Nets in 1977 over the Nets' attempts to move from Long Island to New Jersey.

The lawsuit between the Knicks and Raptors appears to be the first between two NBA teams that centers on basketball-related information.

The city of Philadelphia had a celebration-filled February after the Eagles won Super Bowl LIX on Feb. 9. However, that success hasn't carried over to one particular team in Philly.

The Philadelphia 76ers are in the midst of a nine-game losing streak, the longest active streak in the NBA. Their 1-10 record in February was the worst in the league, according to ESPN Research. Even more grim, the 76ers have failed to win a game since the Eagles won the Super Bowl.

Their tough stretch aligns with Jimmy Butler III's return to Philadelphia in a home matchup against the Golden State Warriors (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC), who have won seven of their last eight. Butler spent one season with the 76ers, aiding the franchise to an Eastern Conference semifinals run in 2019 before signing with the Miami Heat that offseason.

A portion of the 76ers' struggles this season is due to Joel Embiid's availability. The 2022-23 MVP has played in just 19 games because of a knee injury. The trio of Embiid, Tyrese Maxey and Paul George has only played 15 games together, going 7-8.

On Friday, the 76ers announced that Embiid will miss the remainder of the regular season as the team continues to find a solution for his left knee.

In terms of other Philadelphia area professional sports, heading into Saturday the Flyers are at .500 since the Super Bowl, while the Phillies are in the midst of spring training. The Philadelphia Union won their opening match of the MLS season last week.

After the Philadelphia 76ers officially ruled out big man Joel Embiid for the season, ESPN's NBA insiders are breaking down how the 2023 MVP and Philly got here, plus what's next for all sides.


Joel Embiid was in the midst of one of the most dominant scoring seasons in NBA history before Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga accidentally fell onto his left leg on Jan. 30, 2024. Prior to that moment, Embiid had scored more points than minutes played in the 2023-24 season, something no player had accomplished since Wilt Chamberlain more than 60 years ago.

Embiid had a procedure on that left knee a short time later, and it has remained a constant source of trouble for him for the past calendar year, up to when he and the Philadelphia 76ers decided Friday that his 2024-25 season was done.

While Embiid came back near the end of the 2023-24 regular season and played in Philadelphia's six-game loss to the New York Knicks in the first round of the playoffs, he was clearly less than 100%. (It was exacerbated by him dealing with a bout of Bell's palsy during that series, too.)

Yet, Embiid was still a force in that series, averaging 33.0 points, 10.8 rebounds and 5.7 assists per game. That performance was encouraging enough that Embiid was expected to put up a strong performance for Team USA in the Paris Olympics before being ready to go for training camp in the fall. But while Embiid did win a gold medal with Team USA, he struggled for large portions of the run while playing with a bulky brace on his left knee -- though he did have a strong performance in the fourth quarter of the team's legendary semifinal comeback against Nikola Jokic and Serbia.

Embiid arrived for training camp unable to get started on time. What initially was expected to be a few-day ramp-up quickly morphed into a few weeks, with Embiid eventually making his season debut on Nov. 12 against the Knicks.

By then, Philadelphia was 2-8. In fact, Embiid didn't play in a win until Dec. 8, when he returned after a seven-game absence to help the 76ers beat the Chicago Bulls. They then ripped off eight wins in 12 games -- including going 7-2 when Embiid played -- highlighted by a win in Boston on Christmas.

After a win at the Brooklyn Nets on Jan. 4, the 76ers stood at 14-19 and were a game back of the Bulls for the final East play-in spot. Embiid then missed the next month with both a foot sprain and the ongoing knee issues. He finally returned a month later in a win over the Dallas Mavericks on Feb. 4.

That was the final win Embiid played in. Philadelphia dropped his final five games of the season, including Saturday's two-point loss to the Nets that saw him spend the fourth quarter watching from the bench. The team remains mired in an eight-game losing skid, continuing a theme from throughout the season that saw Philadelphia consistently struggle with him on the court for the first time since his rookie year. -- Tim Bontemps


What to expect from the 76ers for the rest of this season?

To this point, the 76ers have yet to say anything other than they're going to try to keep winning and attempt to make the postseason. But that was also before this news, as Embiid officially being shut down culminates a disastrous season for himself and the franchise.

Friday's news will undoubtedly lead to questions about how much longer Paul George will keep playing this season. But, more than anything, this decision will now turn all attention to Philadelphia's top-6-protected first-round pick, the remnant of the 2020 deal that sent Al Horford to Oklahoma City for Danny Green.

The 76ers currently sit in sixth in the lottery -- which gives them less than a 50% chance of keeping their pick. Will they lean into that path, and try to maximize their chances of keeping it, or instead keep trying to win? At this point, it's fair to wonder if it matters either way.

But with star rookie Jared McCain already sidelined for the season with meniscus surgery, there isn't much for 76ers fans to latch on to right now. Instead, they'll spend their nights keeping tabs on the prospects from this year's draft class and wondering if after a season that has felt cursed in many ways, the 76ers will get some lucky bounces of the pingpong balls for June's draft. -- Bontemps


What is Embiid's timetable to return to the court?

Embiid has had two knee surgeries on his left meniscus, both on the lateral (outside) of it. The first was in 2017, the second in 2024. In both procedures, doctors hoped that clipping off the injured portion of the meniscus would create long-term healing. But when two separate surgeries on the same area did not create a lasting fix, doctors have to look at more novel approaches, and that's where we are now.

Embiid experienced pain and swelling in his knee throughout this season. It was unpredictable, sources said, sometimes coming after a good workout or game. That indicates there might be something else amiss with the meniscus or his alignment. His options could be surgical -- another meniscus repair or a meniscus transplant, or even what's called an osteotomy, in which doctors break a bone to realign his body, according to medical experts consulted by ESPN who have not examined Embiid directly.

Those are more radical options that could warrant a lengthy recovery time that could stretch into next season.

Embiid has already received various injections into the knee to promote healing and recovery, but medical experts say there are other, less invasive procedures he could still try. -- Ramona Shelburne


Where do the 76ers stand in the lottery race?

As noted, Philadelphia currently has the NBA's sixth-worst record at 20-38, but there's room to drop even further. The 76ers can't realistically catch any of the three bottom teams. At the low end, the Charlotte Hornets and Utah Jazz (both 14-44) are on pace for just 20 wins but are unlikely to reach that total given teams tend to fade more late in the regular season as players are shut down due to injury and young reserves get more minutes. The Washington Wizards, at 10-48, would have to catch fire to hit 20 wins.

The Sixers could realistically fall below the New Orleans Pelicans, who have won three in a row and are currently 4 games back of the Sixers in the overall standings. So long as Zion Williamson is healthy and playing at an All-Star level -- he has averaged 26.3 PPG on 62% shooting since Jan. 25 and recorded his first career triple-double on Thursday -- the Pelicans are better than the current Philadelphia team.

The Toronto Raptors, currently fifth in the lottery standings, are a wild card. The Raptors are 3-9 since a five-game winning streak in late January, and newly acquired Brandon Ingram still has no timetable for his return from a severe ankle sprain. The Sixers are 2 games ahead of Toronto in the standings.

Going behind just one team would have an enormous impact on Philly's chances of keeping its pick. The No. 5 seed in the lottery gets a top-six pick 64% of the time, compared to 46% for the No. 6 seed. And if the 76ers can finish behind both New Orleans and Toronto as the No. 4 seed, their chances of picking in the top six would increase all the way to 81%. -- Pelton


How does the injury impact Embiid's contract?

Unlike the five-year, $146.6 million extension Embiid signed in 2017 that protected the 76ers in case he suffered a significant injury, there is no such provision in either his current contract or the extension set to begin in 2026-27.

Embiid is owed $248.1 million over the next four seasons ($55.2M, $59.5M, $64.3M, $69.1M), all of which is guaranteed. The only way for the 76ers to get cap relief in future years would be if Embiid's knee issues are deemed to be career-ending.

The determination on whether Embiid suffered a career-ending injury would be made by a physician selected by the NBA and the players' association. If that's the case, then starting on Feb. 22, 2026 (one year from the last game Embiid played), Philadelphia could apply to the NBA to have Embiid's salary for the years of his contract removed from its cap sheet. The Sixers would also have to waive Embiid.

If the injury is not determined to be career-ending but is significant enough that Embiid would miss all of the 2025-26 season, then the 76ers could apply for a disabled player exception that would be worth the same as the non-taxpayer midlevel exception (since 50% of Embiid's salary is higher than that mark).


What's the effect on any 76ers free agency plans?

The 76ers committed $800 million last offseason to Embiid, George and Maxey and are likely locked into their trio for the foreseeable future. The three players are set to earn a combined $146 million in 2025-26, which is 77% of Philadelphia's projected payroll.

How much flexibility the 76ers have to add in free agency will be determined by the lottery in May and the player options of Kelly Oubre Jr., Andre Drummond and Eric Gordon, who will miss the remainder of the season after wrist surgery. The first-round slot and salaries for those three players total $25 million.

If Philadelphia retains its first-round pick and all three veterans opt in prior to June 29, it will be $2 million below the luxury tax before free agency begins. The 76ers would then be allowed to use most of their $14.1 million non-tax mid-level exception to re-sign free agent Guerschon Yabusele.

Besides Yabusele, the big addition is likely to come with a healthy McCain and the potential lottery pick. McCain was averaging 15.3 points before he suffered a season-ending left knee injury in December. -- Marks


What does this mean for the futures of George and Maxey?

George was the top free agent available this past summer, and landing him was supposed to launch the 76ers back toward the top of the East. Instead, George's tenure with the 76ers has never gotten off the ground.

The veteran swingman was coming off one of his best seasons with the LA Clippers but has seen his production drop across the board in Philly. His average of 16.1 points per game is his lowest since his second season in the league, and he's shooting just 42.9% overall. To say his production has fallen short of the four-year, $212 million deal he signed this summer is a massive understatement.

Perhaps a full offseason to get his legs back under him will lead to a different outlook and performance next season, but this was a contract handed to a player who is turning 35 in May that was already expected to look rough in its final years. It was signed to deliver instant production. Instead, it was an instant failure.

Maxey, meanwhile, has bounced back from a slow start to essentially replicate his All-Star season from a year ago, and he remains the bridge to whatever the future of this franchise is moving forward. The 24-year-old guard is already seen as a leader in the locker room, and that role is only going to increase in the years to come. The question becomes what the rest of the roster is going to look like around him, as he's the only player who seems certain to be a factor for the 76ers moving forward. -- Bontemps


Fantasy implications to Embiid's being ruled out

Embiid has the highest usage percentage on the 76ers, with 34.6% of the possessions when he's on the court ending in either a shot, an assist or a turnover. He also leads the team with 8.4 RPG. This means that Embiid's absence will open up a plethora of possessions and offensive and rebounding stat opportunities for other 76ers to fill. Maxey is likely to make the biggest statistical leap without Embiid. In 16 games with Embiid this season, Maxey has averaged 23.8 PPG on 17.8 FGA, but in 34 games without Embiid those numbers leap to 28.8 PPG on 22.9 FGA. Maxey projects as a top-10 fantasy producer for the rest of the season.

The other 76ers player most likely to increase his production moving forward is Yabusele. He averaged 9.5 PPG, 5.1 RPG and 1.2 3PG in 18 games with Embiid this season, but in Embiid's last extended injury absence from Jan. 6 through Feb. 2, Yabusele averaged 14.3 PPG, 6.9 RPG and 1.7 3PG.

Available in 91.3% of ESPN fantasy leagues, Yabusele projects to a top-100 fantasy producer/nightly flex starter as the 76ers' starting center for the rest of the season.

If Embiid is ready for the start of next season, he projects as a high-risk third-round pick in fantasy hoops leagues. When healthy, Embiid has top-three-overall fantasy hoops upside. But he has never played more than 68 games in any season in his career and has now missed 106 of a possible 164 games in the past two seasons. It will be risky to spend a high draft pick on him, but his upside will likely still get him picked in the top 30 of most fantasy hoops drafts. -- André Snellings

Yelich makes return to field: 'Cool to be out there'

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 16:29

PHOENIX -- Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Christian Yelich took a step forward Saturday in his return from back surgery by playing in a game for the first time since July.

Yelich was the designated hitter for the Brewers' 9-4 Cactus League victory over the Texas Rangers. The 2018 NL MVP went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts and an RBI.

"It was just cool to be out there, honestly, because it's a long road from the last time I did it," Yelich said. "Honestly, that was a victory in itself for me today."

The 33-year-old Yelich had last played in a game July 23. He went on the injured list later that month and underwent a diskectomy in August to remove the damaged part of a disk in the spine.

His back issues ended a season in which Yelich earned his third All-Star Game selection. Yelich batted .315 with a .406 on-base percentage, .504 slugging percentage, 11 homers, 42 RBIs and 21 steals in 73 games. He was leading the National League in batting average and on-base percentage at the time of his injury.

The Brewers could use a big season from Yelich as they adjust to the loss of shortstop Willy Adames, who signed a seven-year, $182 million contract with the San Francisco Giants after hitting 32 homers and driving in 112 runs for Milwaukee in 2024.

Yelich expects to be available for the start of the season. His presence in Saturday's lineup was a step in the right direction.

"I honestly didn't care what the results were at all," Yelich said. "Just find out where you're at and go from there. I thought there were some good things, some things that weren't too good. But it was basically how I expected it to be, and my body felt good. That was pretty much the biggest concern of the day."

Stanton to open season on IL; LeMahieu exits

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 16:29

New York Yankees slugger Giancarlo Stanton will begin the season on the injured list because of elbow injuries that have sidelined him this spring.

Stanton has received platelet-rich plasma injections in both of his elbows, according to the New York Post. The 2017 NL MVP has been away from the team while dealing with a personal matter, but he is expected to rejoin it in Tampa, Florida, next week.

Stanton, 35, hit .233 with 27 homers and 72 RBIs in 114 games last season. He had seven homers and 16 RBIs in 14 postseason games and was the ALCS MVP when the Yankees eliminated the Cleveland Guardians.

Also, Yankees infielder DJ LeMahieu hurt his calf muscle during Saturday's 9-3 spring win over the Houston Astros.

Speaking after the game, manager Aaron Boone called the injury "at least a little concerning."

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

Skenes flashes new pitches in strong spring debut

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 16:29

BRADENTON, Fla. -- Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Paul Skenes got a chance to showcase his expanded repertoire to opposing hitters Saturday while pitching in a Grapefruit League game for the first time this year.

Skenes, 22, has been working on adding a cutter and a running two-seam fastball to complement his electrifying four-seam fastball. He struck out four and allowed four hits, one walk and one run in three innings Saturday in the Pirates' 5-2 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.

"You've just got to mix it in," Skenes told SportsNet Pittsburgh and other media after the game. "I learned some stuff about it. It's going to be good, I think."

Skenes is following up a sensational 2024 season in which he earned NL Rookie of the Year honors and went 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA and 170 strikeouts in 133 innings. The Pirates selected him with the No. 1 pick in the 2023 draft after he led LSU to that year's College World Series championship.

Sources: Manfred reviewing bid to reinstate Rose

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 01 March 2025 16:29

Commissioner Rob Manfred is considering a petition filed by Pete Rose's family filed on Jan. 8 to have Major League Baseball's all-time hit leader posthumously removed from baseball's ineligible list, multiple sources with knowledge of the situation told ESPN Saturday.

Jeffrey Lenkov, a Los Angeles lawyer who represented Rose prior to his death at age 83 in late September, said he filed the reinstatement petition after he and Fawn Rose, the oldest daughter of Pete Rose, met with Manfred and MLB spokesman Pat Courtney in the commissioner's office on Dec. 17.

"The Commissioner was respectful, gracious, and actively participated in productive discussions regarding removing Rose from the ineligible list," Lenkov said of the one-hour meeting in the commissioner's office. Lenkov said he is seeking Rose's removal from MLB's banned list for betting on baseball "so that we could seek induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame, which had long been his desire and is now being sought posthumously by his family."

MLB sources acknowledged the commissioner met with Fawn Rose and Lenkov and that Manfred is now reviewing the petition to reinstate Rose. In December 2015, Manfred rejected Rose's reinstatement petition after meeting with Pete Rose. Manfred and Courtney declined to comment on Saturday.

Lenkov's comments came a day after President Trump said he would pardon Rose and criticized MLB for barring Rose from the Baseball Hall of Fame. Rose was banned from baseball for life by Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti in 1989.

"Over the next few weeks I will be signing a complete pardon of Pete Rose, who shouldn't have been gambling on baseball, but only bet on his team winning," Trump posted on social media. "He never betted against himself, or the other team. He had the most hits, by far, in baseball history, and won more games than anyone in history." Although Trump did not say what the pardon would cover, Rose served five months in prison after pleading guilty to tax evasion charges in 1990.

Lenkov said he had "not actively sought" the White House's assistance in his efforts to seek reinstatement for Rose, which he said began years ago.

"When he gets passionate about an issue, POTUS stands behind it," Lenkov said of Trump. "He was passionate about Pete. Pete would have appreciated the President's commitment to him."

Lenkov declined to release the petition that he sent to Manfred. But he said the petition describes "what Rose would have said honestly and candidly to Commissioner Manfred, if he had been able to attend that meeting," Lenkov said.

"It is now time to turn the page on Pete Rose's legacy in baseball and for the Hall of Fame to honor him. Whether you are a fan or not of Pete Rose, we are at our best a nation of second chances, a nation of giving people second opportunities. We don't write off people."

Rose, who spent most of his 24-year career with the Cincinnati Reds, won the World Series three times and remains Major League Baseball's career leader in hits, games played, at-bats, singles and outs. Rose often said no player had won more major league baseball games than him.

In a statement on Saturday to EPSN, John Dowd, who investigated Rose for gambling on baseball for MLB in 1989 and served as Trump's lawyer seven years ago, noted that MLB is "not in the pardon business nor does it control admission to the HOF."

In 2020, ESPN reported that for all practical purposes, Commissioner Manfred viewed baseball's banned list as punishing players during their lifetime but ending upon their death. A senior MLB source told ESPN then that after a banned player dies, MLB informally sees that the banning ends. When Manfred denied Rose's petition for reinstatement, he said, "Under the Major League Constitution, my only concern has to be the protection of the integrity of play on the field through appropriate enforcement of the Major League Rules. It is not a part of my authority or responsibility here to make any determination concerning Mr. Rose's eligibility as a candidate for election to the Baseball Hall of Fame."

In 1991, the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., passed a rule declaring that any player ruled ineligible by Major League Baseball could not appear on a Hall of Fame ballot. This became known as the "Pete Rose rule," because it closely followed the indefinite banning of Rose.

Rose has never appeared on a Hall of Fame ballot. As Lenkov seeks a precedent-setting ruling by Manfred on Rose's removal from the ineligible list, he said he hopes he can use it to persuade the Baseball Hall of Fame to allow baseball writers to vote for Rose's induction.

In the past, Hall of Fame representatives have said that after a player dies-and he's still on the banned list-he still won't be eligible for consideration for the Hall of Fame.

Rose had numerous opportunities to win reinstatement during his lifetime. In the early 2000s, commissioner Bud Selig offered Rose a chance for reinstatement but he insisted on conditions, including that Rose would have to admit he gambled on baseball, make no casino appearances and stop gambling. But Rose declined.

In 2004, Rose admitted in a book that he gambled as a manager of the Reds, but he insisted that he only bet on his team to win. Years later, ESPN reported that Rose also placed bets as a player, but Rose wouldn't admit it. Lenkov said that he is hopeful that Manfred will reinstate Rose and that the Hall of Fame will allow him to be considered. " "Legally, the lifetime ban is over. His lifetime is over," said Lenkov, who also was executive producer of the recent Rose documentary on HBO. "The Hall of Fame has a rule that if you are on the ineligible list, you can't be considered. If he is taken off that list, there's still no guarantee he gets in. It's a unique situation because he's never been on a Hall of Fame ballot.

"But if he gets in, it'll be a wonderful thing. Imagine the outpouring of emotion to go to the Hall of Fame when he's formally inducted. And why not? As a lawyer and as an American, I believe in second chances. Pete Rose has had as long a prison sentence as any person could have ever imagined. Now is the time for Rose to get his second chance."

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Basketball

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Baseball

Bello to miss season's start; Devers delays debut

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