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Eric Gregg

Eric Eugene Gregg (May 18, 1951 – June 5, 2006) was an American umpire in who officiated games from 1975 to 1999. Born in , , Gregg became one of the few black umpires in MLB history during an era of limited diversity in the role, debuting part-time before joining the full-time staff in 1978. Standing 6 feet 3 inches tall and often weighing over 300 pounds, he struggled with throughout his career, which drew public and professional criticism for potentially impairing his performance behind the plate. Gregg's umpiring drew particular scrutiny for inconsistent and expansive strike zones, most notoriously in Game 5 of the , where his calls favored Marlins pitcher Livan Hernández with pitches well outside the standard zone, contributing to ' elimination. His tenure ended amid a 1999 , as he was among 22 umpires who resigned en masse to pressure management, though unlike some, Gregg was not rehired. In retirement, he published a recounting his experiences in the sport. Gregg died of a in 2006 at age 55.

Early life

Background and entry into umpiring

Eric Gregg was born on May 18, 1951, in , . He grew up in a working-class neighborhood in , an area known locally as "," amid a vibrant local sports scene that included . Gregg's entry into umpiring followed attendance at an umpire school, after which he began officiating games in the at age 20 in 1971. He continued umpiring in the minors through 1977, gradually advancing through the professional ranks. This path positioned him as a trailblazer, becoming one of the earliest African American umpires to reach , where he first worked part-time games in 1975 before joining the staff full-time in 1978.

Umpiring career

Minor leagues and MLB debut

Eric Gregg entered professional umpiring after completing umpire school, beginning in the in 1971 at age 20. He advanced through the ranks over the next several years, officiating at progressively higher levels, including Triple-A by 1975, where he worked games such as the June 8 contest involving the Tacoma Twins. Gregg debuted in as a substitute umpire in 1975, becoming the third African American to officiate at that level. He handled limited assignments initially, umpiring 8 games in 1976 and 77 games in 1977. In 1978, Gregg secured a permanent position on the umpiring staff, marking the end of his intermittent appearances and the start of his full-time tenure. Early in his career, he navigated the rigors of professional scrutiny and extensive travel, compounded by the visibility as a pioneering Black umpire in a predominantly white profession.

Notable assignments and achievements

Eric Gregg officiated in two Major League Baseball All-Star Games during his career, serving as the left field umpire in the 1986 midsummer classic at the in . He also worked the between the and San Francisco Giants, handling postseason duties that reflected his standing among National League umpires. Gregg's postseason assignments extended to four —in 1981, 1987, 1991, and 1997—as well as two NL Division Series, assignments typically reserved for experienced and reliable officials. Over his tenure from a 1975 debut through full-time status on the staff starting in 1978 until 1999, he called 2,619 regular-season games, contributing to the league's operational continuity across thousands of contests. As the third African-American umpire in MLB history, following Emmett Ashford and Art Williams, Gregg helped advance diversity in a profession long dominated by white officials, serving as a visible for subsequent umpires in the majors. His sustained presence over two decades underscored early breakthroughs in umpire amid limited opportunities for minorities.

Umpiring style and strike zone decisions

Eric Gregg employed a consistently expansive during his tenure as a umpire from 1975 to 1999, particularly favoring pitchers by calling strikes on pitches farther off the plate's edges and lower in the zone compared to the league average. This approach was evident in regular season games, where players and observers noted the broader boundaries Gregg enforced behind the plate. His style emphasized uniformity in application, maintaining the large zone across matchups without apparent favoritism toward specific teams. The pitcher-friendly zone stemmed in part from Gregg's physical positioning, influenced by his oversized frame, which positioned him more upright and potentially expanded the perceived area for low pitches. This mechanic aligned with principles of maintaining and but resulted in fewer called balls on borderline pitches, thereby reducing walks and accelerating . While hitters occasionally viewed the zone as overly generous to pitchers, potentially disadvantaging and strategies, Gregg's consistent mitigated claims of arbitrariness, as his calls did not systematically benefit one side over prolonged regular season samples. Overall, the style reflected a deliberate emphasis on -calling to uphold pace, though it drew critique for altering batter adjustments mid-.

Controversies and criticisms

1997 NLCS Game 5 and playoff umpiring

In Game 5 of the , played on October 12, 1997, at Pro Player Stadium in , home plate umpire Eric Gregg oversaw a 2-0 victory for the Florida Marlins over the , with Marlins pitcher throwing a complete-game featuring 15 strikeouts on 143 pitches, including 37 called strikes. Video reviews and contemporary accounts documented numerous pitches called as strikes that appeared to miss the edges of the plate by several inches, particularly to left-handed Braves hitters, contributing to the Braves' 15 total strikeouts and their inability to mount significant offense. Gregg's strike zone drew immediate and enduring criticism from Braves players, fans, and analysts, who highlighted its unusual width—exemplified by the game's final pitch, a full-count slider to that arced approximately a foot outside the plate yet was ruled strike three—as evidence of substandard umpiring that swayed the outcome. Quantitative post-game reviews noted Hernández's called-strike rate at 42% of his total strikes, far exceeding his regular-season average of 29%, while Braves starter received calls aligning closely with his seasonal norms (29% called). Baseball America later ranked the game among the third-worst umpired contests from 1975 to 2000, with accusations centering on incompetence rather than deliberate misconduct, though some partisan observers speculated on bias without substantiating evidence. Defenses of Gregg emphasized the absence of formal pitch-tracking data (PITCHf/x era began in 2006), umpire discretion under MLB rules allowing interpretive latitude for the —defined as from the midpoint of the torso to the hollow beneath the kneecap—and Hernández's underlying pitch quality, including high whiff rates against left-handed batters that season. Gregg maintained the zone remained consistent with his career norms and applied evenly, a claim partially supported by historical tendencies for left-handed pitchers to receive marginally wider calls; no investigations uncovered intentional favoritism, and his selection for prior high-stakes assignments, such as the , affirmed his baseline competence amid the inherent variability of human judgment in pressurized playoff environments. Similar patterns of generous zones in other postseason games involving Gregg were noted anecdotally but lacked the quantified scrutiny of Game 5, underscoring episodic error over chronic deficiency.

1999 mass resignation and labor dispute

In July 1999, Eric Gregg joined 56 other umpires in submitting resignations to MLB as a tactic orchestrated by Major League Umpires Association executive director Richie Phillips, who sought to compel the league to begin negotiations on a new labor contract two years early. The strategy relied on the anticipated disruption from mass absences to pressure owners, building on Phillips' prior successes in s through aggressive posturing. MLB accepted all resignations without hesitation, immediately hiring replacements from and independent circuits, which exposed the tactic's vulnerability: the league had a ready supply of qualified umpires willing to work under existing terms. Of the 57, 35 were permitted to rescind their resignations and return, but MLB permanently upheld 22, including Gregg's, stripping those individuals of accrued over years of service—seniority that governed salary tiers, playoff assignments, and vested pension rights. Gregg, despite applying for reinstatement, was denied rehiring in subsequent evaluations; an arbitrator upheld the decision in , awarding him $400,000 in severance but confirming his exclusion from the roster. The maneuver's failure stemmed from a miscalculation of MLB's resolve and operational contingencies, as underestimated the feasibility of rapid replacements and overestimated umpires' unified commitment, leading to internal fractures where members publicly decried the "flawed, doomed strategy" for jeopardizing careers without concessions. defended it as a necessary against perceived owner intransigence, but surviving umpires ousted him in 1999, replacing the structure entirely. For Gregg, the outcome exemplified the perils of high-stakes absent robust fallback mechanisms, as his abrupt exit severed a primary source without restoring for the group.

Health issues

Obesity and weight management attempts

Eric Gregg, standing 6 feet 3 inches tall, struggled with severe throughout his umpiring career, reaching a peak weight of nearly 400 pounds. His weight was officially listed at around 325 pounds during much of his tenure, though observers noted he appeared heavier, contributing to criticisms of reduced mobility and endurance required for the physically demanding role of an , which involves constant positioning and quick reactions. MLB implemented weight enforcement policies following the 1996 death of John McSherry from a heart attack, leading to Gregg receiving a $5,000 fine in 1999 for exceeding the 300-pound limit. Gregg's weight management efforts included multiple interventions, often prompted by league mandates or personal crises, but were marked by significant relapses attributable to lapses in discipline amid a sedentary and habitual . In the early , after entering at approximately 350 pounds following the 1980 season, he lost 106 pounds through a structured regimen, earning attention as the "incredible shrinking ." In the late , league directives for heavier umpires to slim down resulted in a 53-pound loss for Gregg. The most notable attempt followed McSherry's April 1, 1996, on-field collapse, after which Gregg, who had discussed joint weight loss plans with his friend, took an indefinite leave of absence granted by the National League to enter a paid weight-reduction program at Duke University. He shed 100 pounds by July 1996, reducing body weight by about 14% to 325 pounds upon returning to duty, incorporating daily five-mile walks, hour-long swims, and a 2,300-calorie diet. Despite vowing at McSherry's funeral to maintain the loss permanently—claiming to have previously shed and regained 1,000 pounds over his lifetime—Gregg relapsed, exceeding weight thresholds again by 1999 and highlighting the challenges of sustaining changes against entrenched habits. Empirical data on obesity correlates such failures with diminished long-term adherence in high-stress, irregular-schedule occupations like umpiring, where irregular meals and travel exacerbate caloric intake without offsetting activity. Eric Gregg developed as a consequence of his chronic and associated lifestyle factors, including excessive caloric intake from food and cravings that persisted despite repeated efforts. The condition manifested amid his progressive , reaching over 400 pounds by the late 1990s, which fostered and impaired glucose metabolism through sustained driven by dietary excess and limited physical exertion outside game duties. Progression of Gregg's led to peripheral circulation deficits, characterized by reduced to , , and heightened to vascular —outcomes causally tied to uncontrolled glycemia and adiposity-induced rather than inevitable occupational hazards. These complications curtailed his and , exacerbating during prolonged standing and movement required in umpiring, and contrasted with healthier peers who maintained lower body mass indices through disciplined and exercise, underscoring preventable metabolic pathways over uniform professional risks. Gregg faced recurrent hospitalizations for diabetes-related crises, including an emergency intervention in 1997 for acute circulatory compromise, necessitating interventions to stabilize blood sugar and mitigate tissue ischemia. analyses of umpire morbidity reveal diabetes prevalence elevated by shift-work disruptions to circadian rhythms and meal timing, yet Gregg's case exemplifies how personal dietary non-adherence amplified these factors into severe, activity-limiting pathology.

Post-career challenges

Financial difficulties and bankruptcy

Following the mass resignation of 22 umpires in July 1999, including Gregg, accepted the resignations of 13 umpires, abruptly terminating Gregg's employment after 24 seasons and ending his annual six-figure salary. This labor strategy, orchestrated by umpires' union executive director Richie Phillips to pressure management during contract negotiations, backfired when MLB filled the vacancies with lower-paid replacements, leaving the resigned umpires without immediate income or, initially, eligibility. Gregg, like several peers, resorted to borrowing funds from active and former umpires to cover payments amid the sudden cash flow disruption. By 2000, Gregg faced mounting debts that prevented him from covering essential family expenses, including college tuition for his sons and orthodontic care for his daughter. His eldest son was expelled from due to non-payment of approximately $32,000 in tuition fees. These pressures culminated in Gregg filing for around 2001, as he publicly stated the inability to sustain prior spending levels without his umpiring income. The episode underscores the risks of the union's high-stakes tactic, which prioritized leverage over individual financial security, resulting in prolonged for participants like Gregg who lacked diversified savings or alternative employment. While MLB's refusal to rehire Gregg immediately exacerbated short-term hardship, evidence points to inadequate personal fiscal planning—such as maintaining a high-cost post-income loss—as a primary causal factor in the debt accumulation, rather than isolated retaliation. A 2004 settlement provided Gregg with $400,000 in severance pay and restored health benefits, but this came years after the filing.

Later personal struggles

Following his forced departure from Major League Baseball amid the 1999 umpires' mass resignation, Eric Gregg voiced profound attachment to his profession, remarking, "I truly, truly miss it" in a 2001 . He perceived the sport as having rejected him, stating that "… has turned its back on him," which underscored a severance from the umpiring network and camaraderie that had shaped over two decades of his adult life. Gregg relocated to an apartment in Ardmore, a Philadelphia suburb, where he navigated the void of lost professional identity through varied pursuits. These included authoring a column for the Metro newspaper and securing minor acting roles on the soap opera , alongside personal appearances such as judging events like . Bartending at Chickie’s & Pete’s during Phillies games and at Eagles venues offered intermittent connection to sports enthusiasts, whom he described as showing him "so much love," fostering a sense of inclusion: "I feel like I belong." Yet, these endeavors highlighted the disparity between his prior stature and subsequent anonymity, as Gregg reflected on the unplanned exit: "I didn’t want to go out like this" and affirmed retirement was "the furthest thing from my mind." His household comprised wife and children aged 14 to 22 in 2001—Eric Jr., , Ashley, and —with no public accounts detailing relational fractures tied to his , though the abrupt career shift evidently amplified personal on and unforeseen consequences.

Death

Final years and

On June 4, 2006, Eric Gregg suffered a massive at his home in , leading to his hospitalization. He died the following day, June 5, at 6:45 p.m., at age 55. His son, , announced the death and described the brain damage as severe, stating that while his body remained physically present, "the brain is almost gone." Gregg's final years, after his 1999 departure from , were marked by ongoing health deterioration tied to chronic morbid , which had escalated to nearly 400 pounds during his career. This condition contributed to heightened cerebrovascular risk through sustained vascular strain, as correlates with , plaque buildup, and —factors that precipitate ischemic or hemorrhagic strokes. Earlier attempts at , including a 1996 medical leave prompted by the obesity-related death of umpire , highlighted Gregg's awareness of these perils, yet sustained intervention proved insufficient to avert the fatal event. No public details emerged, but the stroke's acuity underscored the cumulative toll of unmitigated metabolic and cardiovascular burdens.

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