The Niagara Falls Review

Why face guards are all the rage

- RYAN DIVISH

Is this latest trend more about fashion or function?

The merits of safety and protection are obvious. But then again, Major League Baseball is a lot like a high school where if the popular kids do something, everyone else is soon to follow. Maybe it’s cool to be cautious? Whatever the impetus or reasoning, the latest fashion fad on the field is face-guard flaps.

Not familiar?

Well, you haven’t been watching baseball lately.

The majority of hitters have added the padded plastic that is bolted to the earflap on the batting helmet and extends down a player’s jaw line, covering the cheek bone.

In the Mariners’ lineup Saturday night, Robinson Cano, Nelson Cruz, Mitch Haniger and Mike Zunino all had the face guards attached to their helmets.

Outfielder Guillermo Heredia, who wasn’t in the lineup, and first baseman Ryon Healy, who is on the disabled list, also wear it.

This isn’t just a trend on the Mariners.

When the Astros played in Seattle, six of the nine players in the lineup had face guards.

“With as hard as guys are throwing right now and the movement they have on the ball, it makes sense,” M’s manager Scott Servais said.

In past years, players who had been previously struck in the face were the only ones that wore the guards.

Haniger was the first player on the Mariners to do so last season. He doesn’t consider himself a trendsette­r.

He didn’t particular­ly enjoy his reasons for being the first.

“Yeah, no one wants to get hit in the face,” he said.

On a bright and sunny Saturday at Safeco Field on July 29, Mets right-hander Jacob deGrom uncorked a 95-mph fastball that rode up and in on Haniger.

At the last second, he was able to turn his head as the ball struck him in the cheek and mouth, tearing apart his upper lip and leaving a facial contusion.

“For whatever reason, I just wasn’t seeing it well,” he said.

“Maybe the shadows, and the really sunny day game. I still think now I can get out of the way of that pitch. I’m just lucky it wasn’t worse than it was.”

When Haniger returned from the disabled list, he had the flap attached to his helmet and his teammates had plenty of questions.

“They kept asking, ‘How is it and how does it feel?’ ” he said.

“I was like, ‘Visually it’s not going to bug you at all. It’s not going to take away from seeing the ball whatsoever. It’s just the weight more on that one side and having it there.’ ”

In past years, the flap was attached to the helmet by clubhouse managers or attendants.

But that’s changed. The helmets, which are more than $150, have to be ordered specifical­ly with the guard attached by the manufactur­er.

It’s why Haniger played the first game of the season without wearing the guard. The Mariners’ matte-finished helmets with the face guards didn’t arrive in time for opening day.

Did he feel naked without it? “It felt really weird,” he said. “But once I got in the box I was so focused that I forgot about it.”

Cano started wearing the guard last year after Haniger’s injury but went back to his old helmet.

“I didn’t feel comfortabl­e,” he said.

“It was hard to get used to.” But he was determined to get used to it and wear it going forward in 2018.

“I said to myself, ‘I’m going to use it all spring training to get used to it,’ ” he said.

 ?? RICHARD W. RODRIGUEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Seattle Mariners Mitch Haniger is greeted in the dugout after hitting a game-tying home run against the Texas Rangers earlier this month.
RICHARD W. RODRIGUEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seattle Mariners Mitch Haniger is greeted in the dugout after hitting a game-tying home run against the Texas Rangers earlier this month.

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