​​Welcome to Sino Beverage Machinery Co., Ltd
Sino Bema
Welcome to Sino Beverage Machinery Co., Ltd

Technical support

We provide 24 hours technical support for all clients all over the world. 

  1. Manual & operation instruction.

  2. Advice for Installation and machines' breakdown. 

  3. Before purchase consultation.

  4. After-sales service.

Machinery Academy​:

Will virus crisis clean up the action?
From:chinadaily | Edit :insomila | Time :2020-05-26 | 3819 Visit | 分享到:
Texas Rangers third baseman Isiah Kiner-Falefa spits during a Major League Baseball game against the Boston Red Sox in Arlington, Texas, in September last year. The particular prevalence of spitting in baseball has been attributed to the sport's working-man roots.

Already banned on sidewalks, outlawed indoors and pooh-poohed by polite society, that gob of saliva and Lord-knows-what-else is done mucking up sports. In the wake of the new coronavirus, teams are revoking the germ-landing privileges that turned dugouts, benches, boxing rings and even grass fields into potential biohazard sites.

No sharing towels, hats, bats, gloves or water bottles. Which could mean the era of spitting, slobbering, gleaking, glanding, hawking, hocking, venoming and expectorating is about to dry up. Or not.

"About time they did something," said Bobby Valentine, who played and managed in the major leagues for more than 40 years, including two stints in the Japanese Pacific League.

"I was over there for seven years and I could probably count on one hand how many times I saw a ballplayer spit. Heck," he added, "they don't even chew gum."

But a moment later, Valentine remembers a photo tucked in a drawer somewhere in his Stamford, Connecticut, home. It reminds him why the loogie will not disappear without a fight.

"It's a picture of me after a game from 30 years ago, back when I was managing the (Texas) Rangers and behind me there's this elongated view of the dugout. There must have been 200 of those green Gatorade cups and all this other … let's just say gunk, laying around.

"And I used to wonder even then," Valentine mused, "why guys couldn't clean up after themselves."

The answer may be as old-and as American-as the sport itself. Baseball began as a working man's game on sandlots and dusty diamonds, and more than a few players struggling with "cotton mouth" turned to chewing tobacco (and later gum and sunflower seeds) to work up some moisture. It became an institution in no time flat.

Pitchers figured out that loading a glob onto one side of the ball made it dip like crazy. Fielders pounded spit into the pockets of stiff leather gloves to soften them up and hitters rubbed it on their hands or lacquered up bat handles to improve their grips, at least temporarily. But it had psychological value, too.