Ex-MLB star Lenny Dykstra says he spent $500,000 to hire private investigators to spy on MLB umpires and used their secrets -- including affairs and gay sex -- as leverage to get calls during games.
Dykstra just spilled his guts on "The Herd" with Colin Cowherd on FS1 ... saying he would essentially threaten the umpires to go public with the information unless he got favorable calls.
"Their blood's just as red as ours," Dykstra said ... "Some of them like women, some of them like men, some of them gamble ... some of them do whatever."
Dykstra says the strategy was effective -- with umpires often shrinking the strike zone for him when he was at bat in the early '90s.
"Its wasn't a coincidence that I led the league in walks the next few years, was it?"
Dykstra did in fact lead the league in walks in 1993.
I've been suspicious of this sort of thing for a long time. Given the vast sums available to players and owners with net worth in the tens of millions or billions, the temptation to do this would be great. And we're talking about a system with hundreds of such people, many of whom are not well-suited to abiding by an honor system.
IOW, it's a crooked racket, probably from top to bottom.