So you're admitting it is possible that the gloves didn't shrink; about time.
I did no such thing. But an interesting attempt.
The expert witness confirmed the shrinkage at 15%. Shrinkage of the gloves made under his purview.
But what would HE know about gloves made by the company that he was vice president and general manager of? A VP and GM who
"was responsible for the design, manufacturing, production, raw material, sales and marketing of all men's gloves."
You and Thx are sure to have known FAR more than Richard Rubin did about the gloves his company made.

You shoulkd have been the expert witnesses, for sure.
MR. DARDEN: Mr. Rubin, who was your employer during 1990?
MR. RUBIN: Aris Isotoner.
MR. DARDEN: And what was your position at that time?
MR. RUBIN: I was vice president and general manager.
MR. DARDEN: When did you first begin with the company?
MR. RUBIN: I started with them in 1976.
MR. DARDEN: Okay. And what were your duties in your capacity as vice president and general manager?
MR. RUBIN: I was responsible for the design, manufacturing, production, raw material, sales and marketing of all men's gloves.
MR. RUBIN: Since I didn't personally try the gloves on at any point in time, I would estimate the shrinkage of approximately 15 percent
MR. RUBIN: I had more difficulty in getting the personal gloves onto my hand with the latex glove on my hand than I normally would.
MR. DARDEN: So then, Mr. Rubin, is there a way to manipulate the gloves we have here in evidence, the Rockingham and the Bundy glove, so that they can return to their original size and shape?
MR. RUBIN: These gloves will never return to the original size and shape in the condition they are in currently.
MR. RUBIN: It's closer to a size large than an extra large.
MR. DARDEN: But when manufactured and purchased, it was an extra large?
MR. RUBIN: Yes, it was.
MR. COCHRAN: All right. And those gloves, when they were made between the period we talked about, 1982 to 1992,
were they in some way shrink-proof?
MR. RUBIN: No.
MR. COCHRAN: Did they have some kind of treatment to keep them from shrinking?
MR. RUBIN: No.
MR. COCHRAN: The manufacturer? Not at all?
MR. RUBIN: Not at all.
MR. RUBIN: Okay. For starters, the lining in this particular glove has been dislodged. I can't get my hand in it at all.
So the glove shrank from extra large to large, and the lining was torn to the point the expert witness couldn't put his own hand in.
But since OJ couldn't get HIS extra large mitt in what became a damaged size large glove, he was obviously innocent.
Fascinating.