This strikes me as...well...illegal.
After grounding out in his first at-bat Saturday, Ken Griffey Jr. was seeing red the rest of the game.
The Reds center fielder slipped inside the team's clubhouse and re-emerged wearing a pair of orange-tinted contact lenses manufactured by Nike.
"I wore them off and on for two weeks," Griffey said. "I was debating on whether I should use them during a game.
"After that first at-bat I decided, 'All right. I'll try 'em now.' "
The vision-enhancing lenses, which are not yet available to the public, seemed to work. Griffey walked and doubled twice in his next three at-bats.
"I don't feel comfortable hitting in glasses," said Griffey, who has 20-20 vision. "Some people can. Some people can't. But with these, they're fine."
The purpose of the lenses is to clarify and highlight objects, such as the spinning seams on a pitched baseball.
Reds closer Danny Graves sported a similar pair of Nike lenses around the clubhouse during spring training but decided against wearing them during a game.
"Everything that is red is red," Griffey said.
"Everything else has like an orange tint. ... It's just different. You're not squinting. Your eyes are more relaxed."
Sunday, April 17, 2005
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