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Because it's dusty out there. Jump to full article: Slate, 2009-11-02 Author: Brian Palmer
Intro: Have baseball players always used smokeless tobacco?
Yes. In the mid-19th century—baseball's formative years—chewing tobacco was enormously popular in the United States. Early ballplayers likely chewed tobacco for the same reasons as other American men, but they soon discovered baseball-specific benefits. It spurs saliva production and lubricates the mouth in the dusty infield environment. When fielding gloves came into vogue in the 1870s and 1880s, players moistened the leather with spit. Pitchers used the juice from a chaw to prepare the notorious spitball, which was widely permitted until 1920.
It's not surprising that chewing tobacco has become identified with baseball. Both pastimes came of age when America was
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