Nokona Bloodline Select Series: BL200 Youth
Features
11.25 Inch Pattern
Black Prime Bloodline Leather - Extremely Durable, High-End Steerhide Leather
Free Shipping!
Made in the USA - Since 1934 (Nocona, TX)
Modified Trap Web
Conventional Open Back
One (1) Year Manufacturer's Warranty
Break-In Required
Youth Fit - Smaller Hand Opening, Tighter Finger Stalls
Description
Reviews
Average Ratings Based on 3 Customer Reviews
Pros: Amazing leather and typical Nokona quality. This glove has amazing memory in the leather, soft yet forms nicely to the players hand. I bought this glove and the KM-1100 for my son. This glove is better suited for a youth player who's unfamiliar on how to properly break in a high quality mitt like the KM-1100 series. Another great Nokona product
Cons: The lace in the Bloodline youth appears to be a smaller diameter. I would of liked to see Nokona use a bigger lace and web lacing design they used in the KM-1100 model for this glove. After a quick tightening of the laces in the trap area the glove formed nicely. Please be carful with the Nokona glove conditioner while breaking in this glove. I read another review on your site and followed his instructions and went light on the glove conditioner. Turned out great. If the glove conditioner is used too much, you will weigh the glove down and cause it to become very heavy for the youth player.
Pros: easy to break in.. i had it working in just a few days.. my 7 yr old son loves it..
Cons: none really but it is just a little heavy
Pros: Best glove I have ever had! Easy to break in and lasts a long time.
Cons:
Questions and Answers
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About the Brand
Joe Phillips writes about his visit to Nokona. It was like sitting in at the plantation party in Gone with the Wind or maybe gazing from the grandstand at the “Field of Dreams” while the Black Sox players tried to work out their idled muscle kinks. And, I was gently reminded by the lines in that movie while I dug into a delicious plate of North Texas barbecue: “threshing crews eating at outdoor tables. It continually reminds us of what once was, like an Indian-head penny in a handful of new coins. . . You talk a good dream.” And here I was. . . graciously invited into this magical and charming “Field of Glove-Making Dreams” in former Comanche Indian land at Nocona, Texas. It was a warm August evening, basked in a golden harvest moon, while friends and the Nokona family paid its kindly southern regards to two of their own and two of America’s finest but relatively obscure glove makers, Bobby Storey and Elvin Ray “Ab” Lemons. You see, the pair had just completed fifty years of time-honored employment with Nocona Athletic Goods, the last of the all-American made ball glove company's. The occasion brought echoes of past successes and human contentment, but in Nocona today you still experience much the same American texture of yesterday and perhaps a glimpse into tomorrow as well.
The two stately gentlemen were being honored in a way that could have taken place in the same manner when they first reported for full-time work at Nokona, in 1952, or back even earlier, in 1933 when the company started making sports equipment. During a brief and informal presentation at the celebration, Nokona’s new sales manager called the two glove makers “Legends - because that’s what their ball gloves stood for, American know-how and pride taken in a best-made product.”
A man of few words but a marveled craftsman who could literally conjure a sows ear into a playable baseball mitt, Mr. Lemons got up and fondly recalled the several men he worked with through his half-century and of the training that had been passed along to him from his old bosses.
His counter part and just as talented, Bobby Storey, had filled in at just about every job at Nokona. Bobby, the son of the sporting goods founder, R.E. “Bob” Storey had most recently served as president and now chairman of the board of Nokona. Though past retirement age like Mr. Lemons, he’s now serving at one of his favorite roles, that of ball glove designer.
At a time for employment in this country when five years is considered a long tenure with the same company, Ab and Bobby are not even the first to complete a half-century journey with Nocona Athletics. The now deceased Jewell Brickey, hit that milestone in 1993, after joining the company during World War II. That’s the kind of devotion that employees forge into this glove-making outfit. A devoted and sustained tenure here is not rare. Last year the company advertising, displayed along with Storey and Lemons, three other employees who had garnered 40 years with Nokona, Warren Clary, Bud Meekins, and Melvin Weedin.“
I don’t have to tell you that the one constant through all the years has been baseball”, wrote W.P. Kinsella. And the most constant of ball glove makers has been Nokona, and the men and women there who keep alive the tradition of American craftsmanship of ball glove making. The spirit of glove-making is still alive and well in Nocona, Texas.
Glove Properties
Color | Black |
---|---|
Feel | Soft |
Glove Type | Baseball |
Position | Infield Outfield Pitcher Second Base Short Stop Third Base All Positions |
Size | 11.25 |
Sub Type | Fielders |
Vendor | Nokona |
Web Type | Modified T |
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