Dayton Daily News

Look, one hand! Receivers upend NFL with new tack

New gloves impress even Lester Hayes, Mr. Stickum.

- David Waldstein

One of CAMBRIDGE, MASS. — the most infamous dropped passes in football history clanged off Dallas Cowboys tight end Jackie Smith as he lay in the end zone during Super Bowl XIII.

Poor Smith. Forty years ago, he had only his bare hands to try to pull in Roger Staubach’s low pass. Had he played in a more recent edition of the NFL playoffs, he almost certainly would have been wearing a pair of the sticky, silicone gloves that have transforme­d receivers’ mitts into virtual Spider-Man hands.

The technologi­cal advances on the skin of those gloves have been so profound that they now enable receivers to snare passes their forebears never dreamed of catching, and in making the seemingly impossible possible, they may be changing football.

The grippy polymer used on the new generation of gloves, said to be developed first by a Canadian wide receiver and a chemist in a Pakistan laboratory in 1999, is about 20 percent stickier than a human hand — according to a recent study by the MIT Sports Lab performed at the request of The New York Times.

The technology has made life easier for receivers at all levels, of course, and now it is rare for any player in search of a better grip — including quarterbac­ks, running backs and tight ends — not to make them part of his standard equipment. Even defenders have taken to wearing them.

“The gloves definitely help with the one-handed catches,” said Rasul Douglas, a cornerback for the Philadelph­ia Eagles who wears a Nike version. “You rarely see guys making one-handed catches without gloves on.”

For those who have not played football in the last 15 years, just touch a pair at a sporting goods store. It will be obvious why the gloves, now manufactur­ed by several companies, are probably the most significan­t performanc­e-related football equipment innovation since the advent of the cleat.

“There’s no long-term statistica­l data that I’ve seen,” said Rich McKay, the chief executive of the Atlanta Falcons and the chairman of the NFL’s competitio­n committee. “But they definitely make some difference.”

When a catch is made, the naked eye often sees only hands grabbing a ball. But what is happening on the palms of a receiver’s gloves is far more complex: the scientific principle of polymer adhesion and the miracle of a molecular chain of silicon and oxygen that creates polysiloxa­nes — viscoelast­ic substances commonly known as silicone rubber. Silicone is used to make a wide range of products, including caulk, kitchen tools and Silly Putty. Receivers use it to make highlight-reel plays.

According to Sanat Kumar, a professor of chemical engineerin­g at Columbia University and a specialist in polymers, the sticky property exhibited in a viscoelast­ic medium arises because the material acts as both a solid and a liquid.

“It is macroscopi­cally a solid,” Kumar explained of the silicone. “But at shorter, microscopi­c lengths, it is liquidlike.”

That liquidlike property makes it sticky. Imagine a tight spiral thrown onto a hard surface like a road. It skips right off. Now imagine the same ball chucked into a large puddle of honey. The honey makes the grab.

Anette Hosoi, a co-director of the MIT Sports Lab and an associate dean of engineerin­g at MIT, is an expert on the interface of soft materials. She and her students conducted experiment­s on a pair of blue Under Armour UA F6 gloves last week to quantify their tackiness, basically measuring the force required to pull a leather Wilson football over both the gloves and over a bare hand, in both dry and wet conditions.

The experiment­s were led by Sarah Fay, an MIT doctoral candidate, who determined the gloves had a coefficien­t of friction of 1.64 when dry, which is roughly 20 percent more grip force than that of a bare hand (1.37 CoF).

Looking over a pair of Under Armour gloves in her office near the Charles River, Hosoi said the key to their performanc­e was how soft and deformable the silicone is, meaning it covers and adheres to the tiniest variations on the surface of the ball, enabling it to almost melt into them.

“Every time you get more deformable, you get a better adhesion,” Hosoi said after slipping on a pair and palming a leather football with her left hand.

But as any coach or Eagles fan knows, adhesion alone does not guarantee catches. As Douglas, the Eagles cornerback, said before last week’s loss to the New Orleans Saints, “There’s people with gloves on who are still dropping passes every game.”

The birth of the current generation of superglove­s can be traced to a wintry day at the University of Ottawa in 1995. A receiver named Jeff Beraznik, who would later found Cutters Sports Gloves, noticed a star from rival Calgary, Donnavan Blair, fielding practice punts with one hand while wearing a pair of orange gloves.

The next year, Beraznik called Calgary’s equipment manager and learned that Blair was wearing glass cutters’ gloves — rubbery mitts designed to protect workers and do-it-yourselfer­s from cuts from glass edges. Those gloves, he found, could be purchased at any hardware store.

Beraznik bought a pair and modified them to fit more snugly. They were not perfect, he said, but they were good enough, and once Beraznik’s teammates stopped making fun of him, they all wanted a pair of their own.

“The whole team was, like, pass me a pair of those glass cutter gloves,” Beraznik said. Hence the name of his company, Cutters.

Beraznik spent 18 months after college traveling the world seeking the perfect material, one that was stickier but also less bulky. He teamed with a safety glove company in Toronto called Midas, which sent him to a lab outside Karachi, Pakistan, to work with one of its chemists.

With a football in hand, Beraznik made repeated trips to Karachi in the late 1990s, at times rolling up his sleeves to work on the formula — adding a little more of this and a little less of that. One day, he and one of the chemists arrived at the current formula, which was named C-Tack.

The modern glove, a huge improvemen­t on the scuba diving gloves worn by NFL receivers at the time, was born. Other manufactur­ers, including a company founded by Jim Sandusky (another Canadian football player), were working on similar products. Eventually Nike, Reebok, Under Armour and others produced their own.

Even Lester Hayes, the former Oakland Raiders cornerback who was known for smearing his hands and body with a ridiculous­ly sticky goop in the 1970s, was impressed. After he came across a pair of Cutters, he sent a handwritte­n letter to Beraznik.

“This is the greatest invention since stickem,” he wrote.

That product, known by its brand name, Stickum, was outlawed by the NFL in 1981 because of the utter mess it made — sticking not only to users, but also to opponents, referees and the balls themselves. The silicone gloves are allowed because they leave no residue on the ball.

 ?? GRETCHEN ERTL / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The grippy polymer used on the new generation of gloves is about 20 percent stickier than a human hand, according to the recent study by the MIT Sports Lab.
GRETCHEN ERTL / THE NEW YORK TIMES The grippy polymer used on the new generation of gloves is about 20 percent stickier than a human hand, according to the recent study by the MIT Sports Lab.
 ?? CAITLIN O’HARA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Jeff Beraznik, a former receiver, started Cutters Sports Gloves.
CAITLIN O’HARA / THE NEW YORK TIMES Jeff Beraznik, a former receiver, started Cutters Sports Gloves.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States