Artificial TurfBy Wikipedia
In sports that were originally or are normally played on grass, artificial
turf is a grass-like playing surface manufactured from synthetic
materials. It is also called synthetic turf.
Artificial turf first came to prominence in 1965, when AstroTurf
was installed in the newly-built Astrodome
in Houston, Texas. The use of AstroTurf and similar surfaces such as 3M's
"TartanTurf" and "Poly Turf" became widespread in the
Super70s and was installed in both indoor and outdoor stadiums used for
baseball and football in the United States and Canada. Maintaining a grass
playing surface indoors, while technically possible, is prohibitively
expensive, while teams which chose to play on artificial surfaces outdoors
did so because even outdoors the clubs believed that maintaining a grass
surface to the increasingly high standards demanded by leagues, players
and even fans was often still far more expensive than installing and
maintaining artificial turf - especially in colder climates and urban
multi-purpose "cookie cutter"
stadiums such as Cincinnati's Riverfront
Stadium, Pittsburgh's Three
Rivers Stadium and Philadelphia's Veterans
Stadium just to name a few.
Some soccer clubs in Europe installed artificial surfaces in the
Awesome80s. Called plastic pitches (often derisively) in countries
such as England, by this decade artificial turf had gained a bad
reputation on both sides of the Atlantic with fans and especially with
players. AstroTurf in particular is a far harder surface than grass, and
soon became known an unforgiving playing surface which was prone to cause
more injuries(and more serious injuries) than a grass surface. The
AstroTurf surfaces were also aesthetically unappealing to many fans. In
the 1990s many North American clubs responded to this pressure by removing
their artificial surfaces and re-installing grass, while others would move
to new stadiums with state-of-the-art grass surfaces that were designed to
withstand cold temperatures where the climate demanded it. In soccer, the
use of artificial turf was banned by FIFA, UEFA and by many domestic
associations.
In the early 21st century, new artificial playing surfaces using sand
and/or rubber infill were developed. These "next generation"
surfaces are often virtually indistinguishable from grass when viewed from
any distance, and are generally regarded as being about as safe to play on
as a typical grass surface - perhaps even safer in cold conditions. Many
clubs formerly using Astroturf and similar surfaces have installed the new
surfaces, while some clubs which have maintained grass surfaces are now
re-considering artificial turf. With soccer clubs in Europe looking to
reduce the number of winter matches that are routinely cancelled due to
frozen pitches, the issue has also been re-visited by that sport's
governing bodies.
Since used car tires are used as base there have been some concern over
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