| Nike recently replaced leather soccer shoes
with synthetic leather ones, such as those worn by Mia Hamm of
the U.S. Womens World Cup-winning soccer team.

For decades, football players have been tossing around the
ol pigskin (the ball is actually made of cows
skin today). Baseball players have been perfecting their horsehide
(cowhide) curve ball for even longer. But the time has come for
sports like soccer, baseball and cricket to field a new ideanonleather
sporting equipment.
The
use of leather balls, pads, gloves, athletic shoes and other gear
supports the cruelty of factory farming and the misery of the
slaughterhouse. For example, it takes the leather of 3.8 steers
to make the 72 footballs used in every National Football League
(NFL) SuperBowl; it takes 3,000 cows to supply the NFL with enough
leather for a years supply of footballs! Baseball actually
has a requirement for the use of leather to make balls written
into its rules (Rule 1.09: The ball shall be a sphere formed
of yarn wound around a small core of cork, rubber or similar material,
covered with two strips of white horsehide or cowhide, tightly
stitched together).
The animals who end up as baseballs and soccer cleats suffer
confinement, crowding, branding, unanesthetized castration, tail-docking,
dehorning and cruel treatment during transportation and slaughter.
Most leather comes from the skins of cattle and calves, but it
can also be made from horses, sheep, lambs, goats and pigs who
are slaughtered for their flesh, as well as from dogs and cats
killed in Asia for their skins and meat.
Much leather comes from India, where the thriving leather trade
is perhaps the cruelest in the world. A PETA investigation into
this trade revealed that many of the animals used for Indian leather
are so exhausted, ill or injured by the time they arrive at the
slaughterhouse that they have to be dragged inside. Because slaughtering
cows is illegal in most Indian states, cattle are marched over hot,
dusty roads for up to 100 miles to secret locations where they can
be loaded onto trucks bound for the slaughterhouse. Deprived of
water during the march, the animals become sick and lame. Hot chili
peppers and tobacco are rubbed into their eyes, and their tails
are painfully twisted and broken in order to make them stand up
after they collapse from exhaustion. In the trucks, they accidentally
gouge each other with their long horns and fall on top of one another
as the trucks careen over potholes in the dirt roads. Because
leather products are rarely labeled, it is difficult to determine
where a leather item came from or what animal it was made from.
When you buy leather balls or other game gear, you may be purchasing
leather from India or from Asian dog and cat tanneries, since
products from these countries are exported all over the world.
During the course of our investigation, PETA discovered that
many cricket balls are made from Indian leather. We contacted
Sanspareils Greenlands, the largest manufacturer of cricket balls
in India and the only company licensed to provide balls to Indian
International Cricket and the Board of Control for Cricket, and
asked them to manufacture a synthetic cricket ball. The company
has agreed and hopes to introduce a synthetic ball very soon.
This will be the first and only synthetic cricket ball available,
coming from the largest cricket-playing nation in the world. It
has the potential to spare the lives and end the suffering of
thousands of Indian cattle.
Sporting
goods giants Wilson (supplier of footballs to the NFL), Rawlings
(licensed supplier of baseballs for major league baseball) and
Nike have also agreed to explore leather alternatives. PETA has
also approached the commissioner of baseball and asked that the
rule requiring balls to be made of animal skins be rescinded.
PETA's baseball tteam uses vegan gloves.
During the past several years, the use of synthetic materials
in sporting equipment has become more popular, since the high-tech
fabrics are more durable, lighter in weight and in many cases,
repel water during outdoor sports.
Alternatives to leather athletic gear are widely available in
synthetic materials, with the exception of cricket balls. Nike
already has one of the largest selections of synthetic shoes on
the market.


Contact your local sports leagues, schools, colleges and
professional teams and ask them to use only nonleather equipment.
If you belong to a sporting league, convince your club to test
nonleather balls and let us know what they think!
Write to the NBA and ask that it switch to synthetic balls:
David Stern, Commissioner, National Basketball Association, Olympic
Tower, 645 Fifth Ave, New York, NY 10022; tel. 212-407-8000
Purchase only nonleather sports equipment from stores and
ask them not to stock leather items. Contact PETA for our free
list of nonleather sporting equipment suppliers.
Write to the commissioner of baseball and ask him to change
the rules to allow nonleather balls to be used: Allan H. Selig,
Office of the Commissioner of Baseball, 2455 Park Ave., 31st Fl.,
New York, NY 10167; tel. 212-931-7800.
Write to the NFL and ask that it switch to synthetic balls:
Paul Tagliabue, President, National Football League, 280 Park
Ave., New York, NY 10017; tel. 212-450-2000.
Contact
the following sporting-goods companies and encourage them to develop
synthetic balls:
Howard Keene, Acting President, Rawlings Sporting Goods, P.O.
Box 22000, St. Louis, MO 63126; tel. 314-349-3500
James Baugh, President, Wilson Sporting Goods Co., 8700 W. Bryn
Mawr Ave., Chicago, IL 60631; tel. 773-714-6400
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