
GRAND OPENING!
SUPER CLEAN SERVICE NOW AVAILABLE!
Revolutionary Cleaning Process Protects Players from Skin Infections
GRAND OPENING
(GARDENA, CA) Super Clean opened its doors at the beginning of hockey season and, if you have not heard by now, offers a revolutionary patented wet wash system to penetrate the fibers and padding of your hockey gear to get at the bacteria living deep down inside of your equipment.
That awful smell associated with hockey gear can now be a thing of the past! Foul-smelling hockey gear is not just offensive to your nose (and your teammates, friends, and family members), but it's also dangerous to your health. If your gear reeks, then it means that dangerous bacteria, mold, fungus and blood are trapped inside your equipment. The infectious micro-organisms in your gear can become a staph infection or community-acquired MRSA (pronounced Mer-Sa). As some hockey players have personally experienced this season, that innocent rash or pimple may be a dangerous infection in disguise.
Co-owner and founder, Andy Selinger said Super Clean was started in response to the CDC's recommendation of regular washing of sports equipment. "Super Clean is necessary now because, over recent years, bacteria have grown resistant to antibiotics. The bacteria that grow in hockey equipment can cause everything from annoying rashes, to serious infections, even to death if it gets inside our bodies. We want to prevent the worst-case scenario by cleaning your gear with our Super Clean process."
Super Clean professionally cleans all types of sports equipment and protective gear used in hockey, football, lacrosse, motocross, baseball, as well as wetsuits, ski and snowboarding boots, boxing gloves, yoga mats, firefighters' gear, and even team mascot costumes. Helmets, skates, and leather gloves are all safely washed used Super Clean's exclusive cleaning process
The owners of Super Clean are life-long hockey players and they were its first customers. "If I didn't feel it was safe to put my skates in that machine, I wouldn't have started this company," Selinger stated.