Albuquerque Journal

The faces of baseball take cover

As the rate of batters getting hit by pitches increases, more seeking protection of C-Flap

- BY BEN WALKER

Bryce Harper, Mike Trout and Kris Bryant, they’re all the face of Major League Baseball.

How about Herb Markwort? Haven’t heard of him? He’s the person helping protect those faces.

Tune into any game these days and you’re bound to see hitters wearing helmets with a seven-inch piece of plastic — the C-Flap — curving around their cheek and jaw.

Giancarlo Stanton, Carlos Correa, Miguel Cabrera and Yadier Molina are among the many converts, with more and more batters making the switch each month.

“I think there’s a lot of first-time guys this year. Me, Trout, Cabrera,” Harper said. “You can go on and on. A bunch of guys.”

Most, like longtime star Hanley Ramirez, offer the obvious reason: “Safety, that’s it,” he said.

Makes sense, too. For a while, hit by pitch rates this season were the highest they’d been since the early 1900s.

“Just to be, maybe, a little bit more comfortabl­e in the box,” Harper said. “Guys are throwing a little bit harder and you see guys getting hit in the head a little bit more. Just trying to be precaution­ary. Rather have it there if I get hit than not.”

Tampa Bay infielder Brad Miller sees a benefit beyond extra confidence.

“It kind of acts like a scope. I know that might sound a little extreme, but it helps get you focused — at least it does for me,” he said.

Whether it’s the tunnel-vision view between the flap and helmet brim, or purely protection, that’s fine by Markwort.

He runs the Markwort Sporting Goods Company in St. Louis, a family business founded by his father in 1931. In 2004, the firm bought the C-Flap from Robert Crow, who had developed the device three decades earlier when he was the Atlanta Braves’ team doctor.

For a long time, only a handful of players used them. They got a big endorsemen­t last year from Milwaukee’s Keon Broxton, who suffered only minor injuries after the face guard intercepte­d a fastball.

“That C-Flap, man, that thing just saved my life,” Broxton said postgame.

This season, the hard plastic piece with the foam padding that sells for under $25 has suddenly became hugely popular in big leagues.

“There’s no doubt about it,” Markwort said last week from his office, as midnight neared. “We’ve been so busy.”

“They keep ordering and ordering. It’s ‘rush, rush, we need ’em!’ ” he said.

Rawlings, also based in St. Louis, is the exclusive helmet maker for MLB. It buys the C-Flaps from Markwort, along with seven little nuts and screws to attach them.

Up to three holes are drilled in the helmet for assembly and then, painted in team colors, they’re game ready.

“Last year, it seemed like it was about one per team,” said Mike Thompson, executive vice president of marketing at Rawlings. “We’ve quadrupled the number we’ve sold this year.”

No surprise, Rawlings plans to come out with its own model in the next year.

“We’ll probably call it the R-Flap,” Thompson said. Bryant began to use it this season after getting beaned. Stanton and Jason Heyward did the same in the past after suffering facial fractures.

Stanton led the majors with 59 home runs last year with Miami, proving the extra piece isn’t an impediment.

Marlins rookie Lewis Brinson was hit in the head a couple times in the minors. He experiment­ed with the C-Flap last year in spring training and found it a tad cumbersome, but quickly adjusted.

“I would say if anyone is debating and on the fence, use it,” he said.

The Brewers made that choice for many of their youngsters. Milwaukee mandated all players who finished 2017 below Double-A wear the C-Flap this year and keep using it for the rest of their minor league careers.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina is shown in a spring training game wearing the C-Flap extension to his helmet, which curves around to protect the cheek and jaw.
JOHN BAZEMORE/ASSOCIATED PRESS St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina is shown in a spring training game wearing the C-Flap extension to his helmet, which curves around to protect the cheek and jaw.

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