Why
your grip
dies.
How grip is made — and why the wrong care destroys it fast.
A sponge,
your glue.
The palm of a goalkeeper glove is made from natural latex — harvested from the sap of the rubber tree, with an open, microscopic cell structure. Physically, it's a sponge with billions of tiny pores. When the ball hits, the material compresses, air escapes, and a negative pressure builds up inside the pores: the capillary effect.
The ball doesn't stick. It gets suctioned in. Each one of those microscopic cavities acts like a miniature suction cup. Thousands of them, per palm.
no suction.
Without vacuum no grip."
Two conditions need to be met for this effect to work: the latex needs a slight base level of moisture, and the pores need to be clear — free from dirt, dust, and especially sweat residue.
Regular handwashing doesn't reach deep into the microscopic cell structure. Cleaning in the GloveBag, on the other hand, flushes the pores completely clear and restores the grip.
Zoom in.
Grip is physics.
Sweat cuts
from the inside.
During training, sweat soaks deep into the latex. It contains salts, fats, and acids that work their way into the pores. If the gloves are left unwashed in the bag, something happens that most people never think about:
The salts crystallize as they dry. They form microscopically small, sharp-edged structures. The next time you use the gloves, these cut open the cell walls of the latex from the inside. The material becomes brittle, the grip foam loses its elasticity. Cracks form.
We see it every day in training: gloves that look perfectly fine on the outside, but whose grip foam is already dead. The keeper replaces the glove — even though with proper care it would have lasted twice as long.
Hand wash only is
better than nothing.
But not great.
For a long time, hand washing was the standard: lukewarm water, specialist cleaner, gentle massaging. Better than nothing — but with three systematic problems.
Machine washing with GloveBag eliminates all three problems at once. Over 1,000 microfibre fingers inside the bag clean more gently than a human hand; the thick fabric protects the foam during the spin cycle; a pH-neutral specialist detergent like GloveWash dissolves salts without attacking the plasticisers in the latex.


