70% of the worlds footballs including 2026 World Cup balls come from this city

Inside the city making 70 percent of the world’s footballs – where the World Cup ball has been stitched for the last 44 years.The official balls for every tournament since 1982 have been made in Sialkot, Pakistan, and many are stitched by hand.More than 100 years ago, locals in Sialkot started repairing balls as a hobby, and now around 40 million balls are exported from the country each year.The colors and logos are applied by hand, and workers closely inspect the finished product.The craft takes months to master and skilled stitchers can complete roughly four balls a day.According to Forward Sports, who produced the World Cup ball this year for Adidas called the Trionda, 2026 is the largest ball quantity they have made in their history.The World Cup kicks off on June 11, and the ball will be kicked across Canada, Mexico and the United States.Stefan Bohrer, who photographed the process of the balls being made, spoke to Talk to the Press: “The sheer scale of football production in Sialkot is astonishing.Knowing that around 300,000 balls leave these factories every day makes you pause and wonder where they all end up.“Yet football is a truly global language.

These balls will be kicked, shared, and celebrated by millions of people around the world, carrying with them the passion of the game and the craftsmanship of the people who make them.”“Standing there, watching this enormous production process, I realized that each ball is destined for a different story somewhere in the world – from a dusty street pitch to the next World Cup Champions.”Sialkot makes hundreds of thousands of footballs every day.Forward Sports first made a World Cup ball in 2014 for Brazil and it now has a separate research side of the company for match balls.Making the World Cup ball is even more regulated, with a new match ball taking three to four years to make.Thermo-technology is often used to ensure no water can get in and that its weight remains constant no matter the weather...

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Publisher: New York Post

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