- Buy Cheap Prescription Eyeglasses Online, Reading Glasses, Fashion Eyewear on Firmoo.com
-
World's Most Popular Online Eyeglass Store
400K+fans have joined us!
- Size:
- 54 18 140 34 140
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 54 17 140 35 138
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 55 17 142 43 140
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 54 18 140 33 140
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 53 17 145 36 135
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 56 18 140 35 148
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 54 18 140 33 141
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
- Size:
- 54 18 140 34 143
- Single Vision:
- Yes
- Bifocal/Progressive:
- Yes
- Material:
- Metal
Didn't find your favorites? Click here to see more glasses on Firmoo
Firmoo provides thousands of eyeglasses, sunglasses and goggles with various styles and colors for you to choose from.
More info about him
Edward John Hearn (born August 23, 1960 in Stuart, Florida) is a former Major League Baseball backup catcher who came up with the New York Mets during their 1986 World Series championship season. He batted and threw right-handed. Hearn began the 1986 season in Tidewater when Barry Lyons won the back-up catcher job out of Spring training. Manager Davey Johnson, however, reversed that decision in early May, and Hearn made his major league debut with the Mets on May 17 against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. He went two for three with a single and a double off Bob Welch, and also caught Greg Brock, who had stolen a base off him in the third inning, stealing in the seventh. While Hearn was on the Mets' World Series roster, he was the only player to not make a post-season appearance. He remains one of the more memorable Mets in franchise history thanks to his backup role to future Hall of Famer Gary Carter during the teams' 1986 World Championship Season and his performance in the team's 1986 music video "Let's Go Mets Go".



















