The present invention relates generally to lacrosse gloves and, more particularly, to a protective sports glove and padding for the same that provides improved flexibility, increased protection, and finer tactile feel.
Protective sports gloves are commonly used and, indeed, required to be used in many organized sports such as lacrosse, hockey, and other contact sports. Such gloves protect the wearer from the impact of lacrosse sticks, hockey sticks, balls, pucks, skates, and other players.
Protective sports gloves include padding to protect the player's fingers, hands, wrists and lower forearms. Despite their protective function, such gloves must balance other design factors such as weight, feel and flexibility. For example, the handling of a lacrosse stick requires a player to hold and control a lacrosse stick handle in specific ways, with many different combinations of hand placement over the length of the handle. A lacrosse player constantly moves his hands along the handle in multiple positions during game play.
In executing game skills, players of games such as lacrosse and ice hockey must be able to grip and control the stick handle, e.g., “stick handling.” Effective stick handling requires a lacrosse player to constantly reposition his hands along the handle to control the head of the lacrosse stick that features a web pocket essential for ball retention, passing and shooting. For effective stick/ball handling, a lacrosse player needs to maintain utmost flexibility of the hand, a sure grip, a precise tactile feel for the stick. However, the hand also needs protection from checking by an opponent's stick so players typically wear padded gloves to protect the back of their hands and wrists. These gloves usually include foam padding or other protective padding covering the back of a wearer's hand, fingers, and thumb. However, the thickness, placement, and other qualities of such padding and glove material in general should ideally cause the least amount of interference with the wearer's natural grip and hand movement during play. An additional requirement of such gloves is that they be comfortable enough to wear for several hours (an entire game and/or practice session) and that the ability of the glove to cause blisters or rash by rubbing against the wearer's hands and/or between the wearer's hands and his or her stick is minimized.
Some conventional sports gloves have pad segments (e.g., made of foam) that are covered with leather or synthetic leather and, in the breaks between the segments, are affixed to one another and to a liner material (also known as the scrim), such as a woven fabric. In these conventional gloves individual foam pads are typically sandwiched between two fabric layers and the layers are sewn together, and to the liner, between breaks in adjacent pads. However, this conventional construct is fairly rigid in design and compromises flexibility and tactile feel for protection. When such a protective athletic glove undergoes deformation due to normal use by a wearer, adjacent pads come into contact with each other and this arrests/resists further motion. When finding the right finger position, e.g., sliding fingers over the stick, prevalent pads and/or seams provide confusing tactile feedback. In addition, the inflexibility of the fabric layers and liner resist stretching and further arrests/resists motion. In straining against these forces to maintain a grip on the lacrosse stick, a player tends to lose their tactile feel for the stick, and consequently their stick handling capability.
Another common feature of conventional sports gloves is the way in which the palmar face of the glove is formed. Because the palmar side of the wearer's hand is usually wrapped around a stick during sports such as lacrosse or hockey, it is less likely to be impacted by other sticks, players, equipment, etc., and therefore the palmar side of gloves for such sports typically has no padding, or at most a thin layer of padding. Instead, the palmar side of the glove is often constructed from multiple panels of a leather or synthetic leather material sewn or otherwise joined together in a single-layer palmar section as shown in
The joinder of distinct panels making up a protective sports glove such as the one illustrated in
What is needed is a protective sports glove and particularly an improved palmar section for the same that employs a novel palmar section to avoid seams, stitching or overlayed layers along a crescent-shaped area running beneath the proximal phalanges of the hand, circling below the index finger proximate the thumb joint and arching inward toward the center of the base of the palm. This would provide improved flexibility, increased protection, and finer tactile feel.
In one aspect, a protective glove uses a hand receiving portion with a dorsal side and a palmar side. The palmar side of the hand receiving portion includes a palmar section comprising two distinct panels of material both formed of leather or synthetic leather including meshes. The palmar section material may optionally include an innermost fabric scrim or liner for comfort. The two distinct palmar panels are cut in complementary shapes and sewn together to form the palmar section. The inventive pattern ensures an unbroken, single-layer, seamless, stitchless crescent-shaped area that runs beneath all the proximal phalanges of the hand, circling below the index finger proximate the thumb joint and arching inward to the center of the base of the palm. The absence of seams, stitching and/or undue thickness in this crescent area optimizes the wearer's feel for the stick, and improves stick handling.
The palmar side may also include discrete peripheral areas of additional padding to protect the bones or fleshy portions of the wearer's hand.
The present invention is described in greater detail in the detailed description of the invention and its embodiments, and the appended drawings. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description that follows, will be apparent from the description, or may be learned by practicing the invention.
Other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and certain modifications thereof when taken together with the accompanying drawings in which:
Reference will now be made in detail to preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
Described herein is a protective sports glove that provides an unbroken, single-layer, seamless, stitchless crescent-shaped palmar area that runs beneath all the proximal phalanges of the hand, circling below the index finger proximate the thumb joint and arching inward to the center of the base of the palm. For purposes of the instant description, the term “palmar crescent” is herein defined as that crescent-shaped portion of the user's hand running from beneath the little finger across all the proximal phalanges of the fingers (pinky, ring, middle and index) of the hand, circling below the index finger and around by the thumb joint, and arching inward to the center of the base of the palm. The absence of seams, stitching and/or undue thickness in this crescent area optimizes the wearer's feel for the stick, and improves stick handling.
With reference to
Digit panel 101 includes an upper portion 101B designed to simultaneously cover the palmar side of four of the wearer's digits, including pinky, ring, middle and index fingers. Digit panel 101 also includes a lower portion 101A designed to cover the base of the hand including, as will be described, a portion of the palmar side of the thumb. The entire digit panel 101 inclusive of the upper portion 101B bridged to lower portion 101A consists of a unitary unbroken seamless layer of leather or synthetic leather or mesh, preferably cut from a singular fabric blank. The upper portion 101B of digit panel 101 is separated from the lower portion 101A by a bulbous notch 105 with ingress beginning at the base of the little finger and projecting laterally across the digit panel 101 to approximately midway, leaving an unbroken bridge of material under the purlicue (the space between the thumb and index finger on the wearer's hand) and joining the upper and lower portions 101B, 101A.
Palm panel 102 likewise consists of a unitary unbroken seamless layer of leather or synthetic leather or mesh, preferably cut from a singular fabric blank in an irregular but generally four-sided shape. Palm panel 102 is designed to cover the base of the hand inclusive of the hypothenar muscles and common flexor sheath (ulnar bursa).
As indicated by the location of reference points A, B and C on the assembled palmar section shown in
To assemble the palmar section 2, digit panel 101 may (optionally) be sewn to an underlying liner or scrim along the seamlines shown in dotted lines in
Thus, as described, the notch 105 of digit panel 101 overlies the palm panel 102 leaving the entire palmar crescent of the user's hand covered by a seamless unbroken single layer from beneath the little finger and all the proximal phalanges of the hand, circling below the index finger and around by the thumb joint, and arching inward to the center of the base of the palm. This optimizes the wearer's feel for the stick, and improves stick handling.
The only overlap of panels 101 and 102 occurs under and/or over (depending on order of layering during assembly, as may be varied) palm panel 102 outside of notch 105 along the base of the hand inclusive of the hypothenar muscles and common flexor sheath (ulnar bursa), where more padding and protection is advantageous. This particular pattern including shape and complementary attachment of digit panel 101 and palm panel 102 provides maximum tactile feel and the minimum amount of interference between the hand of a player and the stick, so that he or she can obtain the greatest tactile feel and muscle control over the stick, while still providing protection for the wearer's hands.
An additional embodiment of the inventive palmar construction herein described is illustrated with respect to
Additional embodiments of a palmar section 22 are possible, as shown in
One skilled in the art will appreciate that the palmar section 2 of the glove may be attached along its edges to a dorsal section with dorsal padding to protect the wearer's hand when worn. One such dorsal portion is shown and described in applicant's co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/080,097, filed 14 Nov. 2013, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
It should now be apparent that the above-described protective sports glove having a palmar section comprising any of the embodiments 2, 21 or 22 allows a user to flex the hand in all directions freely, to grip a lacrosse, hockey or other type of sports stick, and to maintain accurate tactile feel in the palmar side of the glove and at every necessary wrist inclination, all while maintaining a suitable level of protection. The palmar section 2, 21, 22 allows freer flexion and extension, as well as radial and ulnar deviation, and dorsiflexion.
The foregoing disclosure of embodiments of the embodiments of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention or its embodiments to the precise forms disclosed. Many variations and modifications of the embodiments described herein will be obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art in light of the above disclosure. The scope of the embodiments described here is to be defined only by the claims, and by their equivalents.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/645,805 filed 10 Jul. 2017, which derives priority from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/359,789, filed 8 Jul. 2016, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/080,097, filed 14 Nov. 2013, which in turn derives priority from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/730,256 filed 27 Nov. 2012.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62359789 | Jul 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15645805 | Jul 2017 | US |
Child | 16999724 | US |