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"The contacts didn't work," McCann said Friday, after playing two games at Class A Myrtle Beach, a trip that didn't produce a remedy to the ailment that has perplexed him and doctors since the season began.
The three-time All-Star, who's been on the DL for a week, saw three eye specialists in April and tried three different contact lenses, in addition to ointments and medicated drops. Nothing worked.
"It bothered me every at-bat," McCann said of the latest attempt to solve the problem with a pair of contact lenses. Before that, he tried single lenses for the left eye, the only eye that's given him problems.
He played two games at Myrtle Beach, going 1-for-6 with a single, a walk and two strikeouts. McCann said the eye felt good for about 30 minutes after putting in the lens, but then the dryness returned.
He was fitted for new glasses, which he wore taking batting practice Friday at Turner Field. McCann will wear a pair of prescription Oakley sports glasses when they arrive in a day or two, and he'll use a hockey-type helmet facemask that he can keep on during innings, including when he pursues pop-ups or sets up to take throws to the plate.
It's the type of mask worn by many other catchers. McCann has always worn the traditional catcher's mask over a helmet, but that wouldn't work well with glasses because of the need to pull off the mask to make plays.
There's also a chance that he'll be able to catch without wearing glasses.
He'll try the new arrangement after Gwinnett returns for a homestand that begins Monday. McCann hopes the glasses will get him through the season, since he was told that another round of Lasik surgery was recommended only as a last resort.
He was cautiously optimistic after hitting the ball well in batting practice but said he'll have to get used to the glasses.
"I hate being on the DL," he said. "It feels like I'm not here. It's so early in the season, and not playing. . . . This is probably the toughest thing I've had to go through in a long time."
Kawakami update
Kenshin Kawakami did some light throwing without pain in his right shoulder on Friday. The Braves announced Wednesday he would be dropped to the back of the rotation and his next start would be bumped from Saturday to Tuesday because of "shoulder fatigue." The 33-year-old right-hander had a cortisone injection Monday.
Next for Braves
Who: vs. Astros
When: 3:30 p.m. today
TV; radio: Fox; 640/96.1
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