Artificial turf, or synthetic turf, is a grass-like man made surface manufactured from synthetic materials. It is most often used in arenas for sports that were originally or are normally played on grass, however, it is now being used on residential lawns and commercial applications, as well.
Almost as soon as it made its debut in the Houston Astrodome, "plastic grass" acquired a bad reputation. The Astrodome only installed it as a last resort - the stadium's revolutionary roof made it almost impossible to maintain a grass pitch. And even though other football and baseball stadiums followed the Astrodome's lead, artificial turf was never a hit with players or spectators.
In 1981, London soccer club Queens Park Rangers dug up its grass pitch and installed an artificial one. Others followed, and by the mid-1980s there were four plastic grass pitches in operation in the English leagues. They soon became a national joke: the ball pinged round like it was made of rubber, the players kept losing their footing, and anyone who fell over risked carpet burns. Unsurprisingly, fans complained that the football was awful to watch and, one by one, the clubs went back to natural grass. *
In the 1990s many North American soccer clubs also removed their artificial surfaces and re-installed grass, while others moved to new stadiums with state-of-the-art grass surfaces that were designed to withstand cold temperatures where the climate demanded it. The use of artificial turf was later banned by FIFA, UEFA and by many domestic football associations though, in recent years, both governing bodies have recently expressed an interest in resurrecting the use of artificial surfaces as the related technologies continue to evolve (see below 21st Century).
Many clubs formerly using AstroTurf and similar surfaces have installed the new surfaces (most commonly as part of an all-weather training capability), while some clubs which have maintained grass surfaces are now re-considering artificial turf. With football clubs in Europe looking to reduce both maintenance costs and the number of winter matches that are cancelled due to frozen pitches, the issue has also been re-visited by that sport's governing bodies.
Dunfermline Athletic F.C. experimented with a modern synthetic pitch made by Swiss company XL Generation as part of a UEFA programme during 2004-2005. It was unpopular with visiting teams and synthetic pitches were banned by the SPL in 2005. This resulted in Dunfermline having to source a traditional grass pitch.
"The most common type uses polyethylene "grass" about 5 centimetres long, which is lubricated with silicone and sewn into a rubberised plastic mat. The whole thing is then "infilled" with a 4-centimetre layer of sand and rubber granules, which keeps the fibres upright and provides the right level of shock absorbency and deformability. The majority of the 15 or so turf manufacturers approved by FIFA use this technology.The other sort, typified by Dunfermline's pitch, has a base of expanded polypropylene, a foamy material originally developed as a shock absorber for the car industry (see diagram). The grass is also made of lubricated polyethylene fibres, but they are shorter and more densely packed than on an infilled pitch, and are also interspersed with short, curly, spring-like fibres that keep the blades upright. The finishing touch is an 8-millimetre filling of rubber granules." *
According to FIFA, the installation at the Borussia-Park in Mönchengladbach is another major step in the quality and development of artificial turf surfaces.
UEFA have since announced that starting in the 2005-06 season, approved artificial surfaces will be permitted in their competitions.
The introduction of synthetic surfaces has significantly changed the sport of field hockey (see field hockey history). Since being introduced in the 1970s, competitions in western countries are now mostly played on artificial surfaces. This has increased the speed of the game considerably, and changed the shape of hockey sticks to allow for different techniques, such as reverse stick trapping and hitting. Due to the cost of installing synthetic pitches, India and Pakistan have lost their once dominant position in international competition.
Field hockey artificial turf differs from soccer and football artificial turf in the way that it does not try to reproduce a grass 'feel', being made of shorter fibres similar to the ones used on Dunfermline's pitch. This shorter fibre structure allows the improvement in speed brought by earlier artificial turfs to be retained. This development in the game is however problematic for many local communities who often cannot afford to build two artificial pitches: one for field hockey and one for other sports. The FIH and manufacturers are driving research in order to produce new pitches that will be suitable for a variety of sports.
The different categories of pitches include:
Kunstrasen | Pelouse artificielle | Kunstgras | 人工芝 | Tekonurmi | Konstgräs
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