It takes about 3,000 cow hides to supply the NFL with enough leather for a year's supply of footballs.
The NFL Uses 3,000 Cow Hides for Footballs Each Year
Every NFL football that spirals through the air on Sunday represents a small piece of a massive leather operation. Wilson Sporting Goods, the exclusive manufacturer of NFL game balls since 1941, goes through approximately 3,000 cowhides every year just to keep America's favorite sport supplied with its signature equipment.
That's not a typo. Three thousand cows contribute to the NFL's annual football supply.
Wait, Aren't They Called Pigskins?
Here's the thing—footballs haven't been made from pig leather for well over a century. The "pigskin" nickname is a relic from the sport's earliest days when inflated pig bladders were sometimes used as balls. Modern NFL footballs are crafted from premium cowhide leather, specifically from steers raised in the American heartland.
Wilson sources its leather from cattle in Nebraska, Kansas, and Iowa. The hides are tanned at the Horween Leather Company in Chicago—the same family-owned tannery that's been supplying NFL leather since 1941.
The Numbers Behind the Game
Wilson's factory in Ada, Ohio produces around 700,000 footballs annually, with about 4,000 of those being official NFL game balls. Each hide yields enough leather for approximately 10 footballs, which is how you get to that 3,000-hide figure.
- Each football requires four panels of leather
- The leather is stamped, not cut, for precision
- Every official game ball is hand-laced with 250 stitches
- NFL teams go through roughly 100 balls per game
The leather selection process is exacting. Only hides without scratches, brands, or imperfections make the cut. That's why Wilson uses American cattle—they're typically raised in open ranges with fewer barbed wire fences, resulting in cleaner hides.
From Cow to Kickoff
The journey from pasture to playing field takes several months. After the hides arrive at Horween, they undergo a three-week tanning process that turns raw leather into the distinctive tacky, pebbled material players grip on game day. The leather is treated with a proprietary blend of oils and waxes, then embossed with that iconic pebbled texture.
At Wilson's Ohio facility, skilled craftspeople take over. Each football passes through dozens of hands during assembly. Workers cut the panels, stamp them, stitch the laces, and inflate each ball to precise specifications. The process for an official NFL game ball takes about three days.
The Price of Precision
All this craftsmanship doesn't come cheap. Official NFL game balls retail for around $150 each, though teams obviously get a better deal. The league's obsession with quality control means that even slight imperfections get a ball rejected.
So the next time you watch a quarterback launch a perfect spiral downfield, remember—that throw represents one tiny piece of a 3,000-cow supply chain stretching from Midwestern ranches to Chicago tanneries to an Ohio factory floor. The "pigskin" is really a work of bovine art.