FORT MYERS, FLA. — Grayson Greiner stood up. That's it. That's all he did. But that was enough.
When umpire Erich Bacchus called Tigers outfielder Jonathan Davis out earlier this month for not being ready in time for a two-strike pitch, Davis stood briefly in disbelief at the call. Greiner, the Twins' non-roster catcher, rose to his feet and waited.
And a meme was born.
A clip of that moment, taken from the Bally Sports North broadcast, was posted to Twitter the next morning by an account called @CodifyBaseball. At 6-6, Grayson towers a full 10 inches over Davis, who is listed at 5-8, and the video gives that disparity a Judge-and-Altuve feel, even a Shaq-and-Muggsy absurdity. Davis' helmet doesn't even reach Greiner's shoulders.
The original tweet went viral. It was retweeted more than 900 times, and other sports accounts lifted the video and posted it themselves. And in Fort Myers, "my phone just blew up," Greiner said. "One of my buddies sent it to me and said it was on [ESPN's] SportsCenter. I got a lot of texts, a lot of attention."
Especially since the caption so amusingly summed up the comic-book quality of Greiner's hulking presence: "There's never been a taller catcher in all of MLB history than Grayson Greiner of the Minnesota Twins."
But here's the startling part. According to baseball-reference.com, that's literally true.
No player officially listed as 6-7 or taller has ever played an inning behind the plate, according to the website's search engine, and only four players 6-6 have ever done so. One, Anton Falch, caught five games in the Union Association in 1884, and the others were barely more experienced. Don Gile of the Red Sox caught 64 innings over 19 games for the Red Sox in 1959-61, and Pete Koegel had 12 games, totaling 54 innings, for the Phillies in 1971-72.