More than 35 years after playing his last game—and 32 years after managing his last one for the Cincinnati Reds—baseball’s “Hit King” Pete Rose still draws large crowds in Cincinnati, where he remains one of the Queen City’s favorite sons. Now 80 years old and a grandfather, Rose likely won’t be attempting his signature head-first slide that underscored his nickname of Charlie Hustle, but the three-time World Series champion—and 17-time All-Star at five positions—is still hustling his autograph and bantering with fans who wait in long lines to get it. Rose appeared at the Sports Gallery’s Sports Memorabilia Show in the Cincinnati suburb of Forest Park on Dec. 3, where he signed about 500 autographs at $59 to $79 a pop—depending on the item, and whether you wanted Rose to add an inscription on it. A ball. A bat. A baseball card. A Cooperstown Collection Pete Rose jersey with his …