
"Let me ask you this question" is how Pete Rose started his answer.
We were in the midst of a 20-minute phone interview Monday, ostensibly to talk about fanDaction.com and his new fantasy baseball venture with that site where he picks players for daily games and competitors make picks to try to beat his players.
We burned through that topic in about three minutes, with Rose concluding, "We're not trying to put FanDuel and DraftKings out of business. We're trying to get some fans to come over to fanDaction and have some fun with us."
A few more minutes of baseball talk followed — a chat about longevity and his three-decades-ago pursuit of Ty Cobb's all-time hit record, which I'll get to more in a minute.
But I had to ask him about Ichiro Suzuki. At the time of the interview, Ichiro had 4,252 hits combined in Japan and the Major Leagues — 1,278 in Japan, nearly 3,000 in the majors. He had three more last night, bringing him to 4,255 — one short of the total Rose put up entirely in the majors. Ichiro closing in on that hallowed number has created a lot of discussion about how we should treat his accomplishments in Japan. I asked Rose, "What do you think of that discussion?"
"Let me ask you this question," he said from his home in Nevada. "When you take Ichiro's Japanese hits into account, are those his professional hits?"
I answered yes.
"OK," Rose, continued. "Then why aren't you counting my professional hits in the minor leagues? I had close to 500 hits in the minor leagues. If you're going to count his professional hits, count my professional hits."