In February 1985, Pete Rose was offered $3,000 to be the manager of the Arizona Wildcats' Alumni baseball team in the annual All-Pro Alumni game at Sancet/Kindall field on the UA campus.

Rose declined the money after one of his former Montreal Expos teammates, UA legend Terry Francona, told him the school could use the money for its budget. A crowd of 5,092 attended on a sunny February afternoon when the UA alumni team included current, soon-to-be and ex-major leaguers Ron Hassey, Jack Daugherty, John Moses, Greg Bargar, Casey Candaele, Craig Lefferts, Jack Howell, Kevin Ward and Brad Mills.

To the surprise of no one, Rose said he would not only manage, but play. He batted third for the Pros, opposing future major-league pitcher Joe Magrane.

Pete Rose, then of the Cincinnati Reds, takes a cut at the plate during an Aug. 2, 1978, game against the Atlanta Braves in Atlanta.

In the third inning, Rose walked. On a ground ball to second baseman Chip Hale — yes, the current UA head coach — Rose barreled into shortstop Tommy Hinzo, knocking him down in an attempt to break up the double play. Rose was 44 at the time.

At the time, Rose needed 94 hits to break Ty Cobb’s career record. Rather than exit the UA facility as soon as possible after the game, Rose remained in the dugout and answered questions from Tucson reporters for an extended period. He wore a UA letterman’s jacket given to him by coach Jerry Kindall.

“My speciality is determination,’’ he told me that afternoon, and he proved it by pointing to the dirt on his uniform where he had slid hard into second base in a meaningless baseball game.

Even on a lazy Sunday afternoon in Tucson, Charlie Hustle gave the fans their money’s worth. He was one of a kind.


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Contact sports columnist Greg Hansen at GHansenAZStar@gmail.com. On X(Twitter): @ghansen711