This guy...
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quote:
In an interview Tuesday with Fox's Colin Cowherd on "The Herd," Dykstra revealed that in 1993, investigators were given a budget of $500,000 to turn up information on umpires that he could then use to strong-arm the umps into calling a more favorable strike zone for him.
"Their blood's just as red as ours," Dykstra said, as quoted in The New York Daily News. "Some of them like women, some of them like men, some of them gamble, some of them do whatever."
He claimed in the interview that his blackmail attempts correlated closely with the fact that he led the National League in walks, hits and runs that season, in addition to finishing second to Barry Bonds for most valuable player and leading Philadelphia to the World Series.
quote:
"It wasn't a coincidence, you think, [that] I led the league in walks the next few years, was it?" asked Dykstra, who signed a multiyear contract worth almost $25 million after the season. That deal made him baseball's highest-paid leadoff batter.
"Fear does a lot to a man. ... I had to do what I had to do to win and to support my family," he said.
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