It seems every high school (that can afford it) is switching from grass to field turf. The company that makes it claims that it is cheaper to maintain (which it is), and is safer than natural grass. We have this same product on our new practice field behind the seal building. Many former football players I've talked to say they hate it... that it doesn't play like real grass and it doesn't give like real grass. It's also hot as hell in the summer time... much like playing on a hot parking lot.
Below is a graphic of the makeup of field turf. The foundation is usually compacted sand and gravel to enable the field to remove water quickly. Then a permeable barrier is laid down before the actual turf is laid on top of it (much like you'd put in your garden). The strands are a couple of inches long, and they pour a mixture of crushed rubber and sand and use a machine that looks like a street sweeper to pull the strands up over the infill. The desired product is supposed to look and play like real grass.
Going back to talking to former players... many I've said say that this stuff doesn't play like real grass. That even though there is crushed rubber infill, there still isn't the same "give" to the surface. Scott Field, for instance, is a tightly knit natural athletic turf over a mostly sand base (this allows for the surface to remove water). But in all my years of going to games at Scott Field, I've seen injuries that have resulted in sprains, torn ligaments, etc... but I can't say I've never seen an injury that results in legs broken like Treadwell's. This has happened AT LEAST three times at VHS (Brandon McRae '08, The Alabama player this year, and Treadwell).
So... is this stuff safe? High schools all over the country play on a surface like this. Is it safe for them? Many pro teams are switching back to natural grass because the players much prefer it over artificial surfaces. What are everyone's thoughts on this?
Below is a graphic of the makeup of field turf. The foundation is usually compacted sand and gravel to enable the field to remove water quickly. Then a permeable barrier is laid down before the actual turf is laid on top of it (much like you'd put in your garden). The strands are a couple of inches long, and they pour a mixture of crushed rubber and sand and use a machine that looks like a street sweeper to pull the strands up over the infill. The desired product is supposed to look and play like real grass.
Going back to talking to former players... many I've said say that this stuff doesn't play like real grass. That even though there is crushed rubber infill, there still isn't the same "give" to the surface. Scott Field, for instance, is a tightly knit natural athletic turf over a mostly sand base (this allows for the surface to remove water). But in all my years of going to games at Scott Field, I've seen injuries that have resulted in sprains, torn ligaments, etc... but I can't say I've never seen an injury that results in legs broken like Treadwell's. This has happened AT LEAST three times at VHS (Brandon McRae '08, The Alabama player this year, and Treadwell).
So... is this stuff safe? High schools all over the country play on a surface like this. Is it safe for them? Many pro teams are switching back to natural grass because the players much prefer it over artificial surfaces. What are everyone's thoughts on this?
Last edited: