performance contact lenses

Discussion in 'Clothing & Footwear' started by cooler, May 13, 2005.

  1. cooler

    cooler Regular Member

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    i dunno where to put this but this i think would enhance badminton as well.
    Most of us play in dingy gyms with those eye blinding sodium or flourescent lighting will find improvement with these lenses. Surprised that colored contacts isnt exploited earlier as specialized sunglasses are used in skiing, trap shooting and sailing for decades now. I think smash defense will improved for sure.
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    http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/3559064?print=true

    Performance-enhancing contact lenses?
    Stan McNeal / The Sporting News

    Brian Roberts first tried on his newfangled contact lenses about an hour before the Orioles' last spring training game in Florida. He ripped three hits on a day his teammates groused about the difficulties of seeing the ball in the bright sun shining from a cloudless sky.

    A longtime wearer of contacts, Roberts needed no persuading afterward to keep the new lenses, even if they make him look like some wild-eyed creature from a science fiction film. After a monster start — he entered the week hitting .444 with five homers — they might have to be pried away from him.

    Plenty has been said about performance-enhancing drugs this spring. Well, get ready for a new wave of performance enhancers, only these do not cause side effects and are not subject to suspensions. Known as performance-enhancing contact lenses, they were designed to help hitters pick up the seams on the ball better and to protect the eyes from the sun.


    "They're almost like wearing sunglasses without wearing sunglasses," Roberts says. "I could tell such a huge difference right away that I was willing to give them a shot." Seven years in the making by Nike and Bausch & Lomb, the lenses — which will be known in the retail world as MaxSight — are so new they have made their way only into a few major league clubhouses so far.


    Roberts, the Orioles' leadoff hitter and second baseman, is the only player the Sporting News could confirm is wearing them in games. Reds center fielder Ken Griffey has tried them in batting practice and plans to break them out for real once he becomes more comfortable with them. Reds closer Danny Graves also is wearing them during pregame work. Red Sox pitchers Bronson Arroyo and Mike Timlin and Twins catcher Joe Mauer have been fitted.


    Tennis player Roger Federer and several D.C. United soccer players have agreed to try them. The University of Miami has 20 athletes on its football, baseball, tennis and track teams wearing them. The lenses also come in gray-green for golfers, and a set for night use is in the final stages of development.


    In addition to helping him pick up the ball better, these new contact lenses give Brian Roberts' eyes an intimidating amber glow. (Thomas Witte/ For Sporting News)

    But for now, the version that's part orange and yellow with a hint of red — amber, to be precise — remains mainly in the testing stages for the pros.

    Roberts doesn't wear them all of the time, so don't credit his hot start solely to his high-tech eyewear. His amber set is of no use at night, when he plays most of his games. But none of the dozen or so players who had been fitted by last week has turned them back in.

    "It helps your eyes relax instead of squinting all the time," Graves says, "and that helps relax the rest of your body."

    Roberts and Graves have worn contact lenses for years, so their adjustment is not the same as it is for someone who never has worn glasses or contacts, such as Griffey.


    "It took me about 15 minutes to put them in the first time," Griffey says. "I'm still getting used to having something on my eyes."


    Even though Griffey has been a bit slow testing the amber lenses, he was counting the days until a Reds off day so he could try his gray-green set on the golf course. The gray-greens — used in stationary sports; the ambers are geared for speed sports — allow golfers to better differentiate the shades of green on a course.


    Golfer Justin Leonard has a pair of sunglasses with gray-green lenses, and he told Nike he is able to separate out every blade of grass. For baseball players, because amber blocks out blue light, "visual noise" to vision experts, red colors, such as a baseball's seams, are accentuated.


    There are medical advantages as well to wearing the lenses, which basically are soft contacts with a tint that has been scientifically developed. While light can leak through sunglasses, through the opening between the frame and the eyes, performance-enhancing contacts sit on the pupils and better protect them from the sun.


    Because baseball players are exposed to so much sunlight, some of them — Timlin, for one — develop a condition called pterygium that, essentially, causes a callus-type film to form on the cornea, leading to dryness in the eyes.


    "Most important, we want our athletes to continue to see their sport better and better for longer and longer," says Tony Chipote, a marketing field manager for Nike. "As soon as you start to lose your eyesight, the rest of your body will start to suffer. When you have those guys whose reflexes are cat-quick, they're that way based first on what they're seeing."


    When MaxSight hits the market this summer, the sets will be sold at vision care centers, not sporting goods stores. They will be available in prescription and nonprescription lenses and will cost about the same as regular contact lenses. They have a life of about three to four weeks, depending on how often they are worn.


    Could the new lenses be behind Brian Roberts' surprising power surge? (Don Wright / Associated Press)


    They're not for everyone. When Cardinals left fielder Reggie Sanders was told of their attributes, he rolled his eyes. "OK, sure," he said in a "What will they think of next?" tone.


    Shortstop David Eckstein says he is unlikely to try them simply because he can't stand the idea of putting something directly on his eyes. Slugger Albert Pujols turned down an invitation to try them.


    But plenty of others are excited at the prospects. When Nike made its spring training stop in Fort Myers, Fla., it found Twins outfielders Torii Hunter and Jacque Jones were "superexcited" about trying them. But before they could get checked out by a vision specialist, manager Ron Gardenhire was shooing the Nike reps out of the clubhouse because the team was almost ready to take the field for an exhibition.


    "We'll get back to them," says Chipote, who spent spring training visiting the clubs that train in Florida.


    While it seems hitters would gain a bigger advantage from the lenses, there's an edge or two that can be gained by pitchers. For one, pitchers can't wear sunglasses on the mound, so the performance-enhancing contacts give them a way to fight the sun's glare. Just as important, there can be an intimidation factor: Imagine looking out at a pitcher and seeing two bright amber eyes staring back.


    "They make you look kind of evil," Graves says. "Hitters might look at you like you're possessed."


    Until the night lenses are available, anyway. Those are expected to be lighter and a little less menacing-looking. Roberts, for one, also expects them to be much more popular.


    "Because so many games are played at night, I'm not sure if these will take off," he says of the amber version. "But the most popular ones would be the ones in the works for night games. There won't be a phenomenon until then."


    That will be a sight to see, through any colored lenses.

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  2. Joseph

    Joseph Regular Member

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    I'm not too fond of the amber color, but if it works then I guess it's okay.
     
  3. Arcos

    Arcos Regular Member

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    it sure will intimidate ur opponent :D

    sounds pretty cool, but i wonder if a version to accentuated the white shuttlecock will ever be created :rolleyes:
     
  4. SystemicAnomaly

    SystemicAnomaly Regular Member

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    The amber lens might actually be ideal for the white shuttle in a variety of environments. It may or may not be dependent on the quality & color spectrum of the lighting as well as the color of the gym background.

    Amber goggles or glasses are often used by skiers on overcast or low contrast days to improve the contrast of the white terrain. The amber Maxsight lenses might very well do the same (or better) for a white shuttle in a less-than-ideal gym environment.

    Has NE1 tried any of these sports performance-enhancing contact lesnses?
     
  5. azn_123

    azn_123 Regular Member

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    Never tried them but I have those permanent day contacts hehe...cooler the link isn't working!!
     
  6. evylgrynn

    evylgrynn Regular Member

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    i've tried them, unfortunately it was in a huge gym with maroon floors and yellowish walls. It takes a lot of getting used to, but it seems to be intimidating, the girl I was playing mixed against was so scared by my eyes that she kept serving into the net! if you have dark eyes (like me) they will make your eyes look red.
    I will be trying them again in a gym with white walls, in the gym I was at it did not seem to help too much, could have been because of the color of the walls though. They're definitely worth a try
     
  7. t3tsubo

    t3tsubo Regular Member

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    I SAW THESE ON THE DISCOVERY CHANNEL BUT I FORGOT THEIR NAME !!!!!
    thanks for posting the site, i definetly want to try get these for badminton. i wonder if they have prescriptions though for people who actually NEED glasses. it would be lame if your wore those contacts then had to wear glasses to see straight.
     
  8. SystemicAnomaly

    SystemicAnomaly Regular Member

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    Looks like Fox Sports no longer has this story on their site. Bet you don't really need it since Cooler had the whole article pasted into his posting. If you really want it, it's still on the Sporting News site:

    http://www.sportingnews.com/experts/stan-mcneal/20050421.html

    A diifferent article appeared in Men's Health & on the Science Daily site:

    http://sciencedaily.healthology.com/mens-health/article471.htm

    The best article that I came across appeared last year in USA Today:

    http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/2005-06-02-hitting-vision_x.htm


    Last time I checked, the MaxSight lenses were available by prescription only... with or w/o correction.
     
  9. t3tsubo

    t3tsubo Regular Member

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    sorry i meant correction when i said prescription**

    thanks for the links!
     
  10. SystemicAnomaly

    SystemicAnomaly Regular Member

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    MaxSight FREE trial & other info

    More info on MaxSight contact lenses can be found at the following 3 links:

    Press Release at Bausch & Lomb site

    Nike Vision <--- Free trial offer under BROWSE PRODUCT

    The free trial offer may only be available in the US (inspect the free trail certificate to determine if available in your area).
     
  11. Xaviman

    Xaviman Regular Member

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    could you say what is a good color of contact lenses for badminton (using white shuttle)?, because I don't understand really well the english language.
     
  12. SystemicAnomaly

    SystemicAnomaly Regular Member

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    It somewhat depends on the gym lighting and the background color of the gym walls (and ceiling). For a white shuttle, an amber color may work best in many, but not all, badminton gym environments. Amber is a brownish-yellow or orange-yellow color. Ambarino?
    .
     
    #12 SystemicAnomaly, Jan 12, 2007
    Last edited: Jan 12, 2007

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