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The öööö is this OP? We have an amazing field crew. Our football/baseball fields are incredible. Some of the best in the country.
I know you kid, but for the record, NCAA has since outlawed any new or rehabbed fields in any color but green.We should go to a gold colored field while we're at it. Boise State of the south.
As a youth soccer coach, I am mixed on the modern rubber-pellet turf fields. They are awesome to play on, look great, don't have weather issues during the game or over the season like grass does, etc. However, medical cases are accumulating where certain soccer players have a higher incidence of cancer than their teammates. Which ones? Keepers. They are on the turf longer (warmups, dives) and they are much more likely to accidentally ingest the pellets orally when they are diving for balls at the surface. Take a look at a soccer game or NFL game when they show an extreme closeup in slow motion. Those pellets get churned up with every step. After every game, I had to empty my turf cleats of these pellets, and I was simply walking up and down the sideline. My sons also had a ton in their cleats every game as well. When I got word of the increased cancer cases among keepers, I made my keepers and their families know of the possible hazard, and had them take precautions (mouth closed on dives, clear pellets off face periodically as they stick to the skin when sweaty).Modern field turf is pretty cool. Not the Astro Turf of Pepper Rogers's day. Lot of small rubber pellets in a matrix with fake grass to simulate a flexible surface under foot. Under-drained like grass, no crown to the field.
Great for heavily used fields and it is FIFA approved. Ironically, you still have to water them to keep the rubber from getting hard. The surface also gets hot, unlike grass. Used a lot in NCAA baseball.
"Artificial turf was first used in international competition at the FIFA U-17 World Championship Finland 2003. Ten matches including the Final were played on a “FIFA Recommended” artificial surface. Widespread approval from the teams and positive findings in terms of injuries proved that artificial turf is the best alternative to grass. The latest generation of artificial turf, especially designated for football, replicates most of the qualities of grass, and is fully acceptable at all levels of the game."
https://www.fifa.com/about-fifa/new...ial-turf-now-covered-laws-the-game-90911.html
So much for that.
Always keep historic BDS a grass field.
Always.
Is there a study you can link?As a youth soccer coach, I am mixed on the modern rubber-pellet turf fields. They are awesome to play on, look great, don't have weather issues during the game or over the season like grass does, etc. However, medical cases are accumulating where certain soccer players have a higher incidence of cancer than their teammates. Which ones? Keepers. They are on the turf longer (warmups, dives) and they are much more likely to accidentally ingest the pellets orally when they are diving for balls at the surface. Take a look at a soccer game or NFL game when they show an extreme closeup in slow motion. Those pellets get churned up with every step. After every game, I had to empty my turf cleats of these pellets, and I was simply walking up and down the sideline. My sons also had a ton in their cleats every game as well. When I got word of the increased cancer cases among keepers, I made my keepers and their families know of the possible hazard, and had them take precautions (mouth closed on dives, clear pellets off face periodically as they stick to the skin when sweaty).
Wow, I didnt know this. Glad they did or this could definitely get out of control.I know you kid, but for the record, NCAA has since outlawed any new or rehabbed fields in any color but green.
Studies are mixed. Which is why I didn't just pull my teams off of these fields. However, I do believe this bears further study, as does the USEPA.Is there a study you can link?
I'mnotsayingit'saliens.gifHow does the paint fade by week 3 when they paint it 20 hours before every single home game?
Temperatures on that material are crazy hot. In the summer months, it isn’t unusual to have shoes melt if you aren’t wearing the right type.
The “turf” is held down by ground up black rubber. That rubber absorbs heat like crazy.
Say wut?
I firmly believe when you walk off a football field your uni (even blue) should have grass & dirt stains on them.
Which part are you struggling with?