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accident every time he opens his eyes. Thoughts of leaving baseball had been going, going, gone.Staring at the pitcher and waiting for the delivery, Padgett dug in and took a swing.Solid contact. The ball traveled in the air, and Padgett ran for first base it wasn't good enough. The ball found its way into the center fielder's baseball mitt: one out."He threw me a curveball," Padgett said, "and I hit it and it made me feel good about myself. It was good. I enjoyed it."Trotting back to the dugout, Padgett, a redshirt junior at the time, was greeted by his teammates and congratulated.He wasn't supposed to play baseball again."Keep your eye on the ball" resonates as the most important rule in the game, and while Padgett can certainly keep his left eye on that rubber, cork and leather sphere, it's a bit more difficult with his right eye.A year prior to his fly out to center field, Padgett suffered a major injury that few baseball players ever suffer."It was Feb. 2, 2008," Padgett said. "It was the first practice we had on the field and was probably 50 or 60 degrees not usual Blacksburg weather. It was so nice, and I just wanted to get out there. I was in the first batting practice group. I wasn't even supposed to be swinging. I always hit last in my batting practice group for some reason. It was me, Sean O'Brien and two freshmen in our group. They didn't jump in to hit, so I jumped in behind Sean. I fouled the ball up, and it hit me in the eye."The pitch headed toward Padgett's thigh, but instead of dodging the ball, he attempted to take a swing. Baseball would never be the same for him."I fell to