This article appears in the Pacific Northwest version of our April edition. Don’t get the mag? Join US Lacrosse today to start your subscription.
Keith Edgerton doesn’t need perfect vision to appreciate a lacrosse field. He can breathe in and smell the fresh cut grass. Open his ears and hear the shouts of excitement. The jingle of the ball as it cuts through the air. The alarm blaring from the goal reminding players where to shoot.
OK, this isn’t your average lacrosse field. But Edgerton isn’t your average lacrosse coach. Edgerton is legally blind. He coaches plenty of typical lacrosse games, but the game described above would be played at Camp Abilities Olympia, the sports camp he runs in Washington state for blind athletes. They play a modified version of lacrosse in which Edgerton fills a Wiffle ball with jingle bells and wraps duct tape around the holes so it won’t flutter in the wind. The goal is affixed with a buzzer so that players know where to shoot.
“When it comes to modified sports, if I can make the ball make noise or the goal make noise or players make noise, I’m golden,” Edgerton said.
Edgerton makes a pretty complicated solution seem simple. That’s one cool thing about going blind, Edgerton said. It made him a good problem solver. It wasn’t always so easy.
It started young. At first, he couldn’t see at night. Then came little pinheads that appeared in the corners of his vision. The same thing happened to his younger brother. They noticed it first playing sports. A missed bounce pass. Trouble following a hockey puck. When he was 13, he was officially diagnosed with Retinitis Pigmentosa, a degenerative eye disease that causes severe vision impairment.
It was a crushing blow. Edgerton had dreamt of playing lacrosse in college. He didn’t always deal with the diagnosis in a healthy way. Too often, he ignored it. His vision progressively worsened, but he still managed to play on Kansas State’s club team.
This was the early 1990s on the Great Plains. You didn’t need perfect vision to play college lacrosse.
Still, Edgerton kept his diagnosis quiet. He took eye drops to dilate his pupils so he could see around his growing cataracts. He never explained why he occasionally missed ground balls right next to him.