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Félix Reyes replaced Bryce Harper at first base in the very first inning of Saturday’s game against the Colorado Rockies. Harper leaving that early definitely worried the team. But it wasn’t a pulled muscle or a new injury that forced him out. It was a frustrating health problem he had dealt with before.

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Harper fielded a ground ball from the Rockies’ Mickey Moniak at the top of the first inning. Immediately after the play, he was hit by an acute pain. According to a Phillies insider, he suffers from ocular migraine.

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“Bryce Harper said his migraine started immediately after he fielded a grounder in the 1st yesterday,” Ty Daubert posted. “He gets ocular migraines that impair his vision about three times a year. They take an hour or so to resolve. Harper felt better by the 4th, but he was out of the game by then.”

Harper revealed that his migraine occurs about three times per year. And whenever that happens, it impairs his vision. That’s why he had to leave the field while the game was still on. 

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Ocular migraine, sometimes called retinal migraine, is a visual disturbance accompanied by a severe headache. Usually, it blinds one eye, and the occurrence continues from five minutes to an hour. That’s why the fourth inning suited the veteran slugger.

But the Philadelphia Phillies continued with Reyes.

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Ocular migraine is quite uncommon and happens to 1 out of 200 people suffering from migraine. But the scary part is that the exact causes are not known.

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Most medical scrutiny points toward spasms in blood vessels or reduced blood flow behind the eye.

For an average person, temporarily losing one’s sight is a terrifying experience. For a baseball player, playing through it is impossible. You need perfect vision and lightning-fast reactions to hit a 90 mph fastball. When an ocular migraine blurs the sight, one simply can’t track the ball or tell how fast it’s coming.

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The reasons range from hormonal changes to dehydration, from high blood pressure to exposure to bright strobing lights. But there is no specific time of occurrence. And Harper admitted that he usually needs an hour for the migraine to dissolve. It happened back in May 2024, too, when he was scratched from the lineup against the New York Mets. But the community is most concerned about how it has become a trend this season. 

Andrew Painter could not make his scheduled start against the Arizona Diamondbacks because of one. Justin Crawford was also scratched in Miami because of a migraine. And fans have different theories.

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Some feel there is mold in the dugout. Some think it’s turf dust. Some even talked about issues with the water. There is bright LED lights, a loud crowd, and even weather changes that could cause the issue.

Pennsylvania is anyway going through abrupt temperature fluctuations, from a warmer Sunday with a high of 79°F – featuring a potential late afternoon thunderstorm – to a much cooler, unsettled start to the week, with temperatures dropping to 46°F.

Not to mention the stress that comes along with the big leagues.

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A fan sympathized with Harper’s condition.

“I get them too, but fortunately they only last about 20 minutes…so far. Whenever it happens, I’m never quite sure if I’ll get normal vision back.”  

Losing your vision, even if only partially, all of a sudden, is one of the most frightening experiences one can have. And going through that horror at least three times a year feels more challenging for an elite MLB player. 

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Luckily, Harper is back on the roster for Sunday’s game and has already hit a 411-foot homer off Tomoyuki Sugano in the third game against the Rockies. But his migraine isn’t a standalone case for the Phillies. 

Bryce Harper isn’t the first player with migraine issues on the Phillies roster

Philadelphia has witnessed two more migraine cases this season already.

It started as early as April 12, when pitcher Andrew Painter woke up with a headache. According to MLB, Painter has suffered from migraines since travel ball as a kid. However, it wasn’t an ocular migraine, and he didn’t lose his vision. But he vomited multiple times. 

The Phillies’ No. 2 prospect had to use medication to ease the pain because he only had about three hours before the scheduled start at Citizens Bank Park. Unfortunately, it didn’t help the cause, and Painter was eventually scratched from his starting role, 45 minutes before the game. He went in for the third inning and recorded just three hits.

The Phillies had a somewhat similar incident a few days before Harper’s.

Outfielder Justin Crawford was scratched from the Marlins game on May 2. According to Scott Lauber of The Philadelphia Inquirer, he was slated to start the game in the central field. The team had to move with Garrett Stubbs because Crawford couldn’t play due to a migraine.

He was back for the third game in Miami and secured 1 RBI from 4 at-bats. 

“What is up with all these migraines on the team?” a fan projected the most obvious question.

Now, it was a relief to see Bryce Harper and the other two recover quickly. And the Phillies have already confirmed a 6-0 shutout win against Colorado, winning the series 2-1. They are tied for the second spot in the NL East with a 19-22 record. The Marlins and the Nationals have the same numbers as of May 11. 

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Written by

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Ritabrata Chakrabarti

172 Articles

Ritabrata Chakrabarti is an MLB journalist at EssentiallySports, covering Major League Baseball from the MLB GameDay Desk. With an engineering background that sharpens his analytical lens, he focuses on game development, strategic breakdowns, and league-wide trends that shape the season on a daily basis. With over three years of experience in digital content, Ritabrata has worked across editorial leadership and quality control roles, developing a strong command over accuracy, structure, and storytelling under fast-paced publishing cycles. His MLB reporting goes beyond surface-level analysis, offering fan-oriented explanations of individual and team performances, in-game decisions, and roster moves. Ritabrata closely tracks daily storylines by connecting on-field performances with broader seasonal arcs and offseason activity, helping readers make sense of both the immediate moment and the long view.

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Arunaditya Aima

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