Prior to partition Sialkot, now in Pakistan, was the centre of the sports goods industry. Thereafter Jalandhar, Punjab, became the nucleus of manufacturing and marketing Indian sports goods. The city has been famed for sports goods nearly 125 years. Since independence, the industry has expanded to Meerut in Uttar Pradesh, and to Gurgaon in Haryana. Initially, the Jalandhar units only manufactured items for tennis and field hockey, footballs, cricket bats and cricket balls. Later they added rugby balls, badminton racquets and shuttlecocks. They also make items such as sports shoes, apparel, trekking bags and fitness equipment. They are mainly balls, sticks, racquets, shuttlecocks, bats, boards, and protective equipment such as gloves, helmets, chest and abdominal guards.
Sports’ Goods
Manufacture of Sports’ Goods
Badminton: The game is played with a racquet and shuttlecock (shortened to shuttle – also called a bird or birdie). The shuttlecock is a high-drag projectile having an open conical shape. The cone is formed with sixteen overlapping duck or goose feathers (usually only from the left wing) embedded into a round cork base. The shuttlecock’s shape makes it aerodynamically stable – regardless of initial orientation, it will turn to fly cork first and remain in the cork-first orientation.
Bags, cases and kits used to carry equipment for sports could be made of leather or hide, or have leather trimmings. They could even be silk-lined.
Balls used in sports such as cricket, hockey, football, volleyball, basketball, netball, and baseball are traditionally made of leather. Nowadays, balls made of synthetic materials are also available. By 2015 over 50% of the world’s rugby balls were being manufactured at Jalandhar. They shifted from leather to rubber balls when technology changed – for the World Rugby Cup in 1987 the first rubber balls were made in the UK. Tennis balls’ covers are of wool whereas baseballs are stuffed with wool and covered with leather. Table tennis/ping-pong balls are air-filled celluloid (plant origin) or of similar plastic material. Squash balls are made from two pieces of a rubber compound, glued together to form a hollow sphere and buffed to a matte finish.
Baseball and Softball: The baseball consists of a round of cushioned cork centre wrapped tightly in windings of wool and covered by stitched full grain cow-hide. Baseball gloves or mitts could be of leather. But simulated leather foam is used for the helmets. The grip of leather softballs is preferred by pitchers to that of synthetic ones although both are just as good and go as far.
Boxing: The waistband used to protect the boxer’s pelvis from deadly shots that is usually black or red in colour, is some times made of leather, otherwise of rubber. Boxers’ aerobic, workout bag gloves and some other gloves are of leather; so are punching pads and gloves, abdominal and groin protectors, and boxing shoes. Hand-weight gloves are usually of neoprene (rubber). Boxing heavy bags are usually of thick coated vinyl with a nylon outer covering.
Chess pieces could be of wood, plastic, acrylic, bone, man-made ivory or elephant ivory.
Chalk: The powder used on carom boards, etc. is usually boric powder (mineral).
Cricket ball makers from Sialkot first came to Agra, then settled down in Meerut which is now the manufacturing hub from where they are also exported.
In December 2015 the first Day-Night Test was played with pink balls (due to enhanced visibility under floodlights) made with the same components as the red and white ones. The main difference is that the pink balls (that have black outer seams or stitching) are not dipped in grease like the red ones. But a coating of polyurethane (PU as applied on a leather substrate) with multiple layers of pigmentation makes the ball shine longer and move faster.
When in 1996, Beauty Without Cruelty carried an article on sports goods in Compassionate Friend magazine, the 145th Jagadguru Shankaracharya of Puri, Nischalananda Saraswati called upon Hindus not to play cricket with leather balls.
Our Hinsa vs. Ahinsa e-mailer on Cricket and articles on the subject in our magazine did not make as big an impact as a widely published news article in August 2019 which stated that the Earley Cricket Club of Reading in UK had introduced vegan cricket balls – and vegan food. BWC immediately wrote to congratulate Mr Gary Shacklady, the club’s founder and chairman.
In addition to using leather balls to play cricket, at Paleta village in Uttarkhand, the local Khassi Cup is held. To enter the tournament Rs 2,200/- is paid by each team. With the money collected a khassi variety of goat that has been fattened and costs around Rs 8,000/- is bought and presented to the team that wins. A similar tournament is played at Munsyari in which about 14 teams participate and is named the Boka Cup. Boka is a bearded variety of goat. BWC shudders at the thought of these innocent goats that are received as prizes being slaughtered and their meat feasted upon.
Gloves for boxing, golf, racing, etc. could be of cabretta leather or a mix of cabretta and non-animal/synthetic leather. Woolen gloves could also be used. The glove or mitt as is known for baseball is made of padded leather with webbing between the fingers.
Golf clubs could be equipped with expensive leather grips generally made of cowhide or calfskin, although rubber ones are available. Golf balls were originally wooden, then Featherie stuffed with chicken or goose feathers and covered with leather, or white leather balls filled with cow hair. Later, Gutty/Gutta Percha balls were created from the dried sap of the Sapodilla tree. They had a rubber-like feel and the balls were hammered by hand. Then followed the mass machine produced solid rubber cored balls covered with the typical Gutty design. The ball today consists of several layers of various synthetic materials like surlyn or urethane blends with the Gutty design.
Golf shoes are made from multi-seasonal yak leather combined with non-leather materials like light weight EVA or PEVA (poly ethylene vinyl acetate) for soles.
Gymnastics use grips that are worn on the hands when performing. They come in different designs but basically consist of a wide strip of leather joined to a wrist strap. The pommel horse could be of wood with a leather cover or plastic with synthetic material. Training mats are usually of 100% unfilled polyurethane foam and covered with rugged PVC coated vinyl, double sewn for durability.
Hockey sticks are made of wood or composite materials such as fiberglass, but the top half of the sticks have grips of chamois leather, rubber or TPR. The outer casing of the spherical field hockey ball is made up of bovine leather or unbreakable PU/PVC material. Most are made of the latter with a hollow centre, or a cork centre, and called turf balls.
Mountain Biking and Cycling: Biking is a sport that involves more often than not, the use of leather saddles on bikes. Besides this, the biker may choose to wear leather shoes and use leather or woolen accessories. Cycling may or may not involve the use of leather, e.g. cycle accessories, shoes, gloves. In any case animal derivatives go into the making of bike and car tires.
Nets used for games such as tennis, table-tennis, badminton, basketball, hockey, football, etc. consist of cotton, nylon, vinyl, polyethelene and polyester chords/twines/materials.
Poker chips, Dominoes, Dice, Draughts/Checkers, Carrom strikers, and Playing cards may be coated with shellac to give a glossy, silky finish. Poker chips are made from a composition of clay (kept secret), ceramic and plastic. Dominoes are of ivory, bone or hardwood ebony; and sets made of other hardwoods, marble, granite, soapstone, brass, pewter, ceramic, clay, frosted-glass, crystal, polymer, and plastic materials are also available. In different parts of the world dice are made of amber, animal horn, bakelite (plastic), bone, candy, celluloid (plant origin), foam rubber, formalith (organic compound), glass, ivory, metal, paper, plastic, rubber, sculpy (clay), soap, sponge, stone, turtle shell, wax and wood. Draughts or checkers were traditionally made of wood, but are now are plastic. Instead of disks of solid wood, ivory or acrylic, carrom men – including the striker – are rings, originally of wood but today commercially made of light plastic. Playing cards are a combination of paper, plastic and printing mainly by the lithography process.
Racing car seats and accessories could be manufactured using leather as also the grips for motorcycles and bicycles used for racing. All vehicle tires can contain animal origin stearic acid.
Racquets: There was a time when catgut was used to make all sports’ racquets, but years ago most manufacturers stopped using them. The additional advantages being that the non-animal origin string makes the racquets lighter, longer lasting and cheaper.
Sports shoes and footwear: sport shoes, athletic shoes, running shoes, hiking shoes and boots for all games could contain leather, non-leather or both. Hiking and athletic socks could be of wool.
Sports clothing and apparel: Leather and wool could have been extensively utilized, although materials of non-animal origin are also used for making coats, jerseys, pullovers, jackets, gloves and caps for sportspersons.
Soccer: Footballs are of leather. So are soccer cleats, boots, buttons, jackets and even some helmets. The Predator PowerSwerve football boots by Adidas have kangaroo skin uppers. The skin was specially replaced by a lightweight microfibre but only for the internationally famous footballer David Beckham who heeded objections from UK’s animal rights activists.
Snooker/billiard/pool/cue sport tables and some other game-tables like card-tables are covered with typical green coloured billiard cloth referred to as felt, but is actually a woven wool or blend of wool and nylon called baize.
Track racing: Leather race suits are worn often. Some bike handlebar tapes are shellac-coated and shellac is used as a hard-drying adhesive for tubular cycle tyres for track racing.
Traditional Sports of India
Asol Aap: a traditional canoe race of Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
Kabaddi: is physically demanding since it is a combination of wrestling, rugby (without a ball), running and tagging, played by teams. The game was introduced in the Indian Olympic Games at Kolkata in 1938. It has become a very popular sport and matches are telecast live.
Gella chutt: famous in Tripura, the game is played between an “out-group” and an “in-group” of 10 to 12 players each. The nominated “king” needs to reach his team members without touching the “out-group” members who try to stop him.
Gilli danda: played with two wooden sticks.
Hiyang tannaba: a boat race of Manipur, during the festival Lai Haraoba.
Inbuan: played in Mizoram, it is a form of combat wrestling with the catch-hold leather belt worn by the wrestlers around the waist required to remain tight all through the game.
Insuknawr: declared as the game of Mizoram state. It is rod-pushing in which the objective is to push the opponent with the single long rounded wooden rod placed under the arms of both players, out of the circle in three rounds.
Kalari Payattu: Kerala’s martial art, it is similar to Karate, swords or knives to attack adversaries (even unarmed exponents) are utilized. The technique of Pranayama (breathing control) is a prominent feature.
Kusti/Kusthi: Begin by thinking of famous vegetarian wrestlers Sushil Kumar and Yogeshwar Dutt. This ancient Indian combative wrestling takes place in a clay or dirt pit. The soil is mixed with ghee, milk and mustard oil and is tended to before each practice. Wrestlers live and train together in akharas or gyms and follow strict rules on every thing from what they can eat to what they can do in their spare time. Their diet is vegetarian which goes to prove that non-vegetarian food is not at all necessary for wrestlers’ strength, size, etc. (No intoxicants and sex is allowed in order to conserve their energy.)
Lamjei: an athletic event in Manipur, the race is of half a mile.
Mallakhamb: literally means gymnast (malla) on pole (khamb). It involves performing tasks like twisting, turning, stretching and balancing on fixed poles (teak or sesame/rose wood to which castor oil is applied); hanging or suspended poles with chains and hooks; cane or rope using swords and torches; or niradhar meaning performing without support. Nimbleness, flexibility and super reflexes are basic requirements for performances. Over 14 states participate in national Mallakhamb events. (May be, this ancient 12th century performance which keeps spectators spellbound could be promoted by circuses as an “attraction” in place of animal performances.)
Mukna: features a blend of wrestling and judo during the festival Lai Haraoba. Contestants wear a waist belt or ningri, and groin belt.
Pachishi: also known as “mind game” it is played by four players (two teaming up as partners) on a board in the shape of a cross.
Pallanguli: also known as the ‘number game’ and is usually played by Tamil women. The board has 14 cups each payer controlling 7. Six seeds are place in each cup.
Sagol Kangjei: better known as polo is played on pony/horse back with a kang (circular object like ball made from bamboo root) and jei (wooden stick for hitting the object). Protection gear could be of leather.
Silambam: type of fencing, popular in Tamil Nadu.
Thoda: martial art of Himachal Pradesh involving a rhythmic war dance together with archery played with wooden bows and arrows as weapons, on Baisakhi Day.
Vallamkali: a popular ancient ‘snake boat race’ of Kerala during the festival of Onam.
Wrestling and Martial Arts: Wrestlers’ belts are of leather. Sparring gear, protective head gear, belts and dummies for wrestling and martial arts can be made of leather.
Page last updated on 09/12/24