Another lacrosse industry stalwart, StringKing, announced Wednesday that it was working with California state officials to produce a line of personal protective equipment. Mouth guard manufacturer Sisu, meanwhile, is doing its part to help also by producing protective face shields.
But the demand goes beyond clothes, masks and shields. Hand sanitizer also has become scarce, prompting distilleries around the country to shift alcohol production toward the effort to protect against and remove germs from skin.
Guardian Sports, which produces lacrosse balls and soft-shell helmets, recently launched the PEARL PolyArmor net coating. Now the company is using the PolyArmor technology to make an antibacterial solution that can be used on hands and surfaces.
Guardian’s PolyArmor Hand Sanitizer refills come in half-gallon ($35) and one-gallon ($65) shipments. The product is currently sold out.
And while lacrosse players have been idled by the cancellation of the spring college and high school seasons, several have discovered a renewed purpose in the fight against the coronavirus disease.
When Sarah Heringer, an emergency medicine specialist at Kaiser Permanente in Sacramento, Calif., came home one night looking for supplies, her lacrosse-playing daughters, Grace and Ella, were eager to help. They turned the dining room of their Davis, Calif., home into a family assembly line, using a laminator, scissors, foam weather strips, cohesive bandage wrap and double-sided mounting tape to create homemade face shields.
What started with the Heringer sisters and their three younger siblings — Faith, Hope and Jacob — has since spawned a non-profit organization with more than 120 volunteers. Team SHIELD (Students Helping in Emergencies and Life Disasters) includes a core of Davis High School and NorCal RIZE club lacrosse players.
Team SHIELD has raised more than $6,000 and produced more than 1,000 face shields in the last week, delivering them to hospitals throughout the region.
“They’re running out as fast as we’re making them,” said Grace Heringer, a junior midfielder.
Ella Heringer, a freshman midfielder, said she knew they were onto something when she went with her mother to Kaiser Permanente to replenish the stock of face shields there.
“The director there was so happy, because they were running out,” she said.
Similar stories circulated in college athletics in the last week. Megan Power, a senior midfielder for the Siena women’s lacrosse team, was featured in the Albany Times Union for sewing hundreds of masks out of fabrics she found at her house in Cranbury, N.J. Former Saint Michael’s women’s lacrosse captain Emily Loebs has received nearly 400 orders since she started crafting masks after hours from her home in Boston.
“You wonder what athletes do when they don’t have sports to play,” said Jennifer Morris, the Heringers’ coach at Davis High School and with NorCal RIZE. “This is just a good outlet.”
You can take lacrosse out of the community, but you can’t take the community out of lacrosse.