That's pretty embarrassing.
Bring out the green spray paint.
What the hell happened to the field? It's been awful all year and no one associated with the program seems to give a damn.
I guess the turf got torn up by the opposition in the first 2 home games.
Yes I know Fitz. It was my failed attempt at stealthy sarcasm regarding our team's effort in the first *2* home games, that the opposing teams "tore it up" in those 2 losing home games.NU has played 3 home games already..........
I'm just glad you guys are not happy with it, and are not making excuses. The field pictures look like a bad high school field. With all your money how is this even allowed to happen?
It looks even worse...
Has anyone provided you with an explanation, Lou? Seems awfully odd since apparently we were a top-10 grass field last year...
https://www.lawnstarter.com/blog/landscaping/best-natural-turf-college-football-stadiums/
I'm gonna ask some people about it tomorrow.
Thanks. Someone tweeted that this condition is particularly bad in the midwest this year and may be the cause. Have no idea if there is any merit to this claim tho. Of course, Nebby fans are tweeting nonsense about it that the should cancel the game, etc.etc.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythium_in_turfgrass
Your post cracked me up, and that's why I gave it a thumbs up. Nice effort on a Friday night.How can we have an incompetent offensive coordinator, a terrible wide receivers coach, and an offensive line coach who has managed to hang on to a job he is not qualified to hold for more than 5 years while former players, boosters and us 200 fans constantly call for change? HOW CAN EVERYTHING SUCK AND OUR HEAD COACH GO OUT OF HIS WAY TO PRAISE HIS STAFF AFTER BEATING A PIECE OF SH*T DUKE TEAM?
There are a variety of questions we can not answer around here, and the lack of attention to the field is the least of our concerns.
O, but our jerseys look nice, and the lunch boxes we make for players after they have 1 good season (which now have a direct correlation with that player getting injured)
It's been like that since the first game too.I'm gonna ask some people about it tomorrow.
Many of the lawns around where I live about a mile or so from the stadium have been invaded by some type of fungus. It all started to happen about the time the football season kicked off.
Yes I know Fitz. It was my failed attempt at stealthy sarcasm regarding our team's effort in the first *2* home games, that the opposing teams "tore it up" in those 2 losing home games.
The condition of the artificial surface at the end of its life was really brutal. Lots of tears in the carpet and just a surface so hard it must have caused the players a lot of pain landing on it.
The current condition of the field is unacceptable. I'd like to hear a response from our AD how it was allowed to get in such horrible shape.
Turf doesn't have a bank account so it's meaningless to him.
Problem is that it looked like that in week one. Why? And now three weeks later, shouldn't someone have had their *** chewed to the point where it would be addressed by now?
There is a fungus among us. Probably why the OL cannot block.
Many of the lawns around where I live about a mile or so from the stadium have been invaded by some type of fungus. It all started to happen about the time the football season kicked off.
Now that you mention it, I think you're right. You rang a bell. I remember hearing in the beginning of the season that the field had some kind of a fungus.
I have had two different types of fungi attack my lawn several times in the past two years,One more in dry weather and one in wet weather. I have had to re-sod several hunks of the lawn both this year and last year, as one type of fungus strikes quickly and kills to the roots . It is definitely a different type of disease because of the climate and type of grass, but the point is that if you suspect a disease is attacking your lawn and you must treated immediately. It will only get worse. I am a believer in using a granular fungicide instead of liquid because it is like time release and does not quickly leech into the ground or get washed away by heavy rain .
It started with those torrential rains we had in August, particularly that really bad one about a month ago, which they said dumped 5 inches in this area but really dumped about 15 inches of rain in some sort of micro-downpour around here. My wife's calf-high gardening boots were full to the top after that rain!!!
Then came serious heat and humidity after that... A classic recipe for Summer Patch. Particularly with bluegrass (we have a rye/bluegrass mix).
Most homeowners are clueless about these things so I'm not surprised to see it with homeowners. But professional turf people should know better. If NU didn't turn off the sprinklers, and they failed to get the right fungicide down early, that'd do it...
Your lawn is Bermuda, though, right? Very different animal than bluegrass.[/QUOTE
Bluegrass is beautiful, but will not survive in South Florida. Not many people plant Bermuda around here . Most people plant Saint Augustine which is horrible crap but it will survive the climate. The alternative is zoysia which looks much nicer, but not many people use it . You see it a lot more on golf courses because they want them to look much nicer, and Saint Augustine is terribly coarse
Obviously I am in a different climate and have a different type of grass, this horrible crap known as Saint Augustine which feels like industrial grade carpet, but one of the diseases that has attacked my lawn the last two years follows the same pattern, heavy rain in August or September followed by unusual hot and humid weather seems to make the disease a lot worse. I did not have a clue what it was when I was first attacked by either disease. I have now learned to zap it thoroughly with fungicide at the first sign of a problem.
Saint Augustine is awesome from keeping barefoot people off your lawn! It hurts to walk on.
I was at a Waubonsie Valley football game recently and the grass field was just beautiful. Granted Aurora/Naperville is far from Evanston but unlikely to be a material factor in the dramatic discrepancy in field condition.This summer was pretty good, actually -- lawns in the Chicago area look better than they have in a while. Last year and the year before had dry, hot summers that ravaged lawns, but this year was pretty temperate. I don't know what NU's excuse is.
Actually they likely have the Solder Field crew here.They are bringing in the grounds crew from the Canton Hall of Fame game........