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PETE ROSE  

Barry Bonds will almost undoubtedly break the all time home run record held by Hank Aaron this year barring an injury.
Barry Bonds is the new home run king. He surpassed the record, held by Hank Aaron, on Tuesday when he hit career home run number 756.
Hank Aaron hit a record 755 home runs in a fabulously steady 23 years baseball career. This article tells of his life in baseball and how he endured racial prejudice as he passed Babe Ruth's mark of 714 in 1974.
Ask any baseball fan to name the greatest home run hitters of all-time and the answer will include any or all of the following - Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron or Barry Bonds. Rarely will you hear someone mention the name Ralph Kiner
Barry Bonds is no doubt one of the greatest and most exciting players to ever play the game of baseball. Anyone who knows a little about sports knows that he is about to break Hank Aaron's all time home run record.
Barry Bonds is an amazing baseball player whom is approaching the record for the most home runs hit all time.
Babe Ruth made Baseball popular by hitting home-runs. His single season and lifetime home-run totals have been passed but many people see the "Babe" still as the Home-run King.
Baseball's Home-Run King Barry Bonds Was Indicted in Federal District Court on 15 Counts of Perjury & Obstruction of Justice
Despite all of the ongoing investigations and rumors, Barry Bonds, Major League Baseball (MLB) Outfielder for the San Francisco Giants, is going to hit his 756th home run.
In the second inning against the San Diego Padres, Barry Bonds hit his 755th home run and tied Aaron for first place.
A Babe Ruth home run ball from his greatest season has remained in the family of the man who caught it for decades.
One year ago if someone had asked me, I would have admitted that I thought Barry Bonds would break Hank Aaron's all-time home run record.
I am going on record to say that Roger Maris' single-season home run record of 61 home runs in 1961 is still the undeniable (if not official) MLB record for homer runs in a single season despite being broken several times.
Babe Ruth was a man who did things on a grand scale. It should come as no surprise then that with his famed "called shot" in 1932, Babe Ruth is at the center of one of the greatest controversies in World Series history.
After hitting his 500th home run at the age of 32, many people think Alex Rodriguez will break the all-time home run record. Unlike Barry Bonds, nobody suspects A-Rod of using steroids, so how many home runs would he hit if he did use steroids?
When Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth's record, it was a media event. When Barry Bonds breaks Aaron's record, will it even be shown on national television?
Sure, Barry Bonds is poised to break the record, but how long until Alex Rodriguez takes the honor off of his shoulders?
There's nothing courageous about pretending something you find distasteful never happened. Especially when you created the culture in the first place. That's why Commissioner Bud Selig needs to see Barry Bonds become the all-time home run leader.
If you are bored with all of the coverage of Barry Bonds soon to be hit 756th home run, here is a way to have fun with it.
a discussion on Bonds' chances of breaking the home run record
Reaching 500 home runs used to be considered one of the most special milestones a major league baseball player could achieve. But with four players approaching the 500-homer mark this season, the milestone doesn't mean quite as much as it used to.
2007 was a banner season for the hitting of milestone home runs. In this article we take a look at five of the biggest.
Major league baseball fans were able to witness two aging superstars both reach milestone marks today when Craig Biggio banged out his 3000th hit and Frank Thomas hit is 500th home run of their respective careers.
Jason Tyner made headlines when he finally hit his first Major League home run Here's a look at players with little or no power throughout Major League history.
This article suggests the possibility that Ken Griffey Jr should be considered the Home Run King
This examines the players after World War II with the worst strikeout to home run ratio (K/HR).
A list of the top 10 MLB long ball hitters of all time.
The number now is 751 Home Runs, 4 away from a tie with Hank Aaron and 5 to break it.
Barry Bonds is one of the best baseball players of his era, but steroids are the only reason he is on the cusp of passing Hank Aaron for the major league home run record.
This season many MLB stars are off to such a slow start that home-run totals around the league lower were lower in April than they have ever been since 1993.
When I was a kid, there were a handful of men with more than 500 home runs. Now there are 22!
There is no doubt that Barry Bonds will pass the home run record now held by Hank Aaron. It would take some event that would not only keep him out of action for the rest of the baseball season, but would also prevent him from ever playing baseball again.
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig can make a much needed statement by not attending the game in which Barry Bonds breaks Hank Aaron's all-time home run record
There is much ado about Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens these days. Barry Bonds, of course, is closing in on Hank Aaron's home run record. And Roger Clemens, for yet another year, has reentered baseball well after the start of the season.
So why would MLB and Selig bypass a perfect publicity and marketing opportunity and keep their distance from celebrating this once in a lifetime moment? The answer is simple: Because Barry Bonds is the one passing Babe Ruth.
The big story this year in baseball is, "When will Barry bonds break Henry "Hank" Aaron's career home run record?" However, there are a lot of other potential home run milestones that may be reached this season that are being overlooked as a result of Bonds.
Does anybody realize that Ken Griffey Jr. is tenth all time in home runs? Does anybody realize that by the end of this season he could be fifth behind Aaron, Bonds, Ruth, and Mays? Why is nobody talking about this generation's REAL superstar?
Many people reject Bonds' home run record, accusing Bonds of being a cheater. But Bonds has done nothing players for years before him haven't done.
The way Bonds is going Bud Selig would have to attend about two dozen games to see it, if he's lucky.
Is the home-run record reached by Barry Bonds tainted? Some say he used steroids. Others respond that there is racist sentiment against Bonds' record.
Is there really that big of a difference between steroid use and the pharmacy of supplements that most players run through their bodies?
The ball, which sold for 750 grand at auction, will be branded with an asterisk and donated to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
I came across two short blurbs from the wire reports about arguably baseball's two biggest on going headaches, Barry Bonds and Pete Rose that I just couldn't resist commenting on, although I'm not quite sure what they said this time that set me off.
Bonds sent a deep home run to center field, closing the gap to the great Hank Aaron to only one. He will have an excellent chance to break the record this weekend at the friendly confines in San Francisco.
San Diego fans cheered when Bonds tied Aaron's HR mark. It's just the latest example of the MSM getting the Bonds story wrong. This article urges people to read the news with an understanding of its bias and embrace Bonds' historic feat.
Barry Bonds is back for another year with the Giants looking to break the homerun record
A discussion on the significance of passing Babe Ruth and how the possible steroid controversy should or should not affect enjoying History in the makinhg
When Russ Springer plunked Barry Bonds in the back last week it sparked a national debate.
A brief history of the longest home runs ever hit in Major League Baseball, from Mickey Mantle to Mark McGwire.
Ralph Kiner hit 369 homers in a short ten year career with the Pirates, and then became a Mets announcer, where he would sometimes leave his listeners scratching their heads.