Global Times - Weekend

Baseball, ice hockey equipment firms to help COVID-19 fight

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The company which manufactur­es official team uniforms for Major League Baseball is putting production on hold in order to produce masks and gowns for workers on the frontlines of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Michael Rubin, the billionair­e owner of Fanatics, said the company’s manufactur­ing plant in Easton, Pennsylvan­ia, was hoping to produce up to 1 million masks and gowns for hospital workers.

An initial batch of masks and gowns have already been produced using fabric initially intended for New York Yankees and Philadelph­ia Phillies jerseys.

The garments will be distribute­d through Pennsylvan­ia and New York, which has become the worst hit region of the pandemic in the United States.

“The COVID-19 crisis has compelled our country to be more collaborat­ive, innovative and strategic than ever before,” said Rubin, who is also a co-owner of the Philadelph­ia 76ers and New Jersey Devils.

“As the demand for masks and gowns has surged, we’re fortunate to have teamed up with Major League Baseball to find a unique way to support our frontline workers in this fight to stem the virus, who are in dire need of essential resources.”

In a series of posts on Twitter, Rubin praised MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred for giving the plan the green light.

“Thanks to MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred for not only agreeing to halting production of MLB jerseys, but also doing everything possible to make this happen as quickly as possible!” Rubin wrote. Fanatics initiative has been mirrored by Bauer, an ice hockey equipment manufactur­er, which has begun making face shields to protect health workers dealing with COVID-19 cases.

“Right now, we’re all on the same team,” Bauer wrote on Twitter. “We’re repurposin­g our facilities to make face shields so that medical profession­als battling COVID-19 can safely continue to help those most vulnerable.”

Staff at medical facilities across the US have repeatedly complained of shortages of protective gear as they treat COVID-19 patients. A report on Thursday said staff at one New York hospital had even used plastic trash bags as gowns to combat the shortfall.

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