1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to protective sports equipment and, in particular, ice hockey shin guards with a cut-resistant sleeve that covers a user's exposed lower leg.
2. Description of the Background
Protective sports equipment is commonly used and often required many organized sports such as lacrosse, hockey and other contact sports. For example, shin guards are common precautions against painful contusions to the lower leg when the shin is kicked by another player or is struck by a puck or ball. Conventional field hockey shin guards are typically fabric-encased rubber pads and/or rigid plates, with elasticized fabric straps that wrap around the back of the leg. Conventional ice hockey shin guards typically feature a molded plastic outer layer and a softer inner padding layer with elastic straps that wrap partially around the leg to keep the shin guard in place. These conventional shin guards protect against frontal impact but offer no cut protection in the areas most prone.
Recent injuries in ice hockey have made this cut-type of injury a serious topic for improvement. In 2012 Erik Karlsson won the James Norris Memorial Trophy as the National Hockey League top defense player. In 2013 he was retrieving the puck in the corner when the skate of an opposing player sliced into the back of his left foot. Karlsson's Achilles tendon was nearly severed and his season ended. There have been many similar incidents, and short-track speed skating is another sport where skate cuts are common.
Both cut-proof and cut-resistant socks are available but skaters and players find them uncomfortable and rarely wear them. Alternative heavy knitted yarn socks do not adequately protect the ankle area and adversely affect skate fit and comfort. Sleeved shin guards are known in the sport of field hockey, but are configured differently from the present invention, including having a rigid plate essentially built into the front portion of a sleeve to cover a portion of a user's lower leg. Such shin guards often include a stirrup that extends underneath the foot. The objectives of shin guards designed for blade sports, such as ice hockey, and those designed for field hockey overlap somewhat, but the articles are otherwise of a different genus.
What is needed is a protective shin guard with integral cut protection about the ankle that will not shift or come loose during play and will not affect skate fit or comfort
One object of the present invention is to provide a shin guard that protects the shin and knee from impacts.
Another object is to combine an enhanced level of integral cut protection without obstructing forward flex and mobility of a skater's leg.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a shin guard with integral cut protection about the ankle without affecting skate fit.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a shin guard that facilitates donning and lacing of skates with shin guard on.
In one aspect, a protective shin guard includes a floating knee section hingedly attached to a shin section, both sections being formed of a hard shell panel. The floating knee section is attached to the shin section by a main padding layer that underlies both hard shell panels. The main padding layer may be formed of one or more contiguous blocking panels of compressible foam (e.g., high-density microcellular polyurethane foam), or similarly by fabric layers cut-and-sewn together to encase foam pads.
A liner is attached beneath the main padding layer. in one embodiment the liner is removable using hook-and-loop pads or the like. The liner can also be permanently attached by sewing, soldering or other conventional means. The liner may likewise be formed of one or more contiguous blocking panels of compressible foam or by foam pads encased in hinged fabric layers. In either case, the liner may be formed with a particular hinge pattern including a radial array centered at the knee section, a lateral hinge beneath the knee cap, and a plurality of spaced vertical hinges extending down the shin.
The liner also includes an integral cut-resistant calf-sleeve attached along its bottom edge and extending downward. The cut-resistant calf-sleeve may be an elastic tubular sleeve formed of a weave of elastic/cut-resistant fibers, e.g., Kevlar®, Spandex, Dyneema®, fiberglass coated yarn, or the like. Alternatively, the calf-sleeve may be formed of non-cut-resistant fibers that are either treated or coated in such a way as to make the sleeve cut-resistant. One such coating material is commercialized under the tradename SuperFabric®, produced by HDM, Inc. of Oakdale, Minn. The cut-resistant calf-sleeve is long enough to surround both the calf and the ankle, and thereby provides integral cut protection about the ankle without compromising skate fit and comfort. It also provides a lower attachment feature that combines with an upper 360+ degree attachment strap to provide a better fit that will not shift or come loose during play.
The present invention is described in greater detail in the detailed description of the invention, 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.
The embodiments of the present invention described herein all regard a protective shin guard that employs a particular impact-resistant hard-shell outer assembly and shock-absorptive inner liner. The main outer assembly employs a first flex-padding configuration comprising a floating hard-shell knee section attached to a hard-shell shin section by a main padding layer, and flanking side panels hingedly attached to the hard-shell shin section by the main padding layer. The inner liner may be removably attachable inside the main outer assembly by hook-and-loop. Alternatively, the liner can be permanently attached by sewing, soldering or other conventional means. The liner employs a second flex-padding configuration and includes a cut-resistant calf-sleeve attached at its lower extremity to provide cut protection to the lower calf and ankle.
The shin guard is attached to the leg by the cut-resistant calf-sleeve in combination with a behind-the-knee strap. The knee strap is a 360+ degree compression strap, preferably elastic, that wraps fully around the leg and works in conjunction with flanking side leg panels to pull them in from all sides for a secure compression fit.
Referring to
The illustrated embodiment of shin section 44 can include a central Y-shaped shin bone panel 402 seated within a conforming U-shaped bottom panel 404, and two flanking side leg panels 106, 108. The hard shell outer panel(s) of the shin section 16 may also include one or more pass-through vents 111 into the padding layer 20 for air circulation.
As seen in
Also seen in
In the illustrated embodiment, as seen in
Referring back to
Liner 6 is preferably formed of one or more contiguous blocking panels of compressible foam (e.g., high-density microcellular polyurethane foam) hinged together, or by opposing fabric layers cut-and-sewn together to encase foam pads. The knee pad 62 is roughly circular to occupy the interior of concave knee section 44, and may be defined by a spider-web array of hinges 67. Lower shin pad 64 is roughly crest-shaped and may be defined by an array of spaced vertical hinges 68. Importantly, hinge 66 occurs beneath the knee cap.
Liner 6 includes a cut-resistant calf-sleeve 80 attached to the lower shin pad 64. Cut-resistant calf-sleeve 80 is formed of a cut-resistant yet stretchable material comprising a woven fabric blend of two separate fibers, the first being an ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene high-performance material such as DuPont™ Kevlar® aramid or Dyneema® fiber and the second being an elasticized fiber such as Spandex®. The two fiber strands are knitted together in an overall resulting fabric blend at weight percentages as desired to provide a particular level of cut resistance. Preferably the resulting fabric blend may be 60-90 weight percent (%) of the high-performance fiber and 10-40% of the elastic fiber which provides an acceptable range of cut resistance. There are three standardized methods for testing cut resistance: ASTM F1790 (U.S.), ISO 13997 (International) and EN 388 (Europe), and for present purposes at least an ANSI/ISEA 105 performance level 1 fabric should be used and is herein defined as “cut resistant.” Sleeve 80 may be treated or coated to achieve the desired level of cut resistance. The resulting fabric is sewn in the form of a tubular sleeve and as seen in
The shin guard 2 is attached to the leg by the cut-resistant calf-sleeve 80 in combination with a 360+ degree compression strap 100, best seen in
It should now be apparent that the above-described protective shin guard 2 allows a user freedom of movement, especially in a hockey scenario, yet maximum protection and secure fit.
The foregoing disclosure of 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 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 invention is to be defined only by the claims, and by their equivalents.
The present application derives priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/107,971 filed 26 Jan. 2015.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62107971 | Jan 2015 | US |