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Blutarsky
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Aug 2010 Location: / Status: Offline Points: 990 |
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Posted: 18 Mar 2020 at 13:11 |
Since there's no actual rugby to discuss...
I actually meant to start a thread about this a while back. I have played three matches on plastic this year, and I and my teammates are unequivocal in our hatred of them. We have had loads of injuries while playing on them, and have some players who simply won't/can't play on them. I am pretty injury resilient (touch wood) and have played 200+ national league games without missing one through injury. I dread to think how high the actual figure is, not to tempt fate, as the last time I missed a game through injury was c.2008 with a pulled hamstring. Anyway, I have suffered far more niggles and injuries which can be played with on plastic than on grass. On top of this there are the superficial injuries, and I have had pretty severe grazes to knees, elbows and my face after each of these games. On two occasions my knees have bled through my chinos in the hours post game. Further evidence of the injuries caused by these pitches is the sheer amount of time spent on stoppages for injury because of them. In our last game on plastic we kicked off at 3pm and didn't finish until a few minutes past 5pm. It felt like the game would never end. In summary - get rid of them or only have them as emergency fall backs when there has been lots of rain and games would otherwise be off.
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Richard Lowther
Coaching staff Moderator Joined: 19 May 2007 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 6605 |
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Trying to get an angle in this. Is it the actual pitch or difference in how a player plays on the pitch? Is it a lack of give, the length of the 'turf', the type of footwear worn, the watering/maintenance, the rubber crumb? Are some better than others? Is it different to.playing in hard ground at the beginning of the season? Do other sports suffer in the same way? If not, why not? |
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Bigmal
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Nov 2013 Location: BRISTOL Status: Offline Points: 1480 |
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Excellent post from someone who plays the game. Ive never played on an artificial pitch but have had a few nasty grazes early late/season when the grounds are hard. Painful, slow to heal and likely to become infected so don't have fond memories of that aspect of my playing career.
I watch Bristol occasionally on "hybrid" pitch which appear to play and hold up well but I would be interested in any thoughts. Never been to Sarries but on TV pitch looks like plastic from the 70's - surprised hat the danger money argument wasn't used! |
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Bigmal
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Nov 2013 Location: BRISTOL Status: Offline Points: 1480 |
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Thanks Richard - as usual an objective and clear post which should promote constructive debate. |
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Blutarsky
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Aug 2010 Location: / Status: Offline Points: 990 |
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1. Combination of factors, see 3. 2. I nor anyone I have played with or against have acted differently due to playing on plastic other than obvious adaptations you might make to game style due to improved conditions for handling, kicking etc. Contact is treated in exactly the same way. The only exception has come when it comes to the act of scoring, as most choose to avoid sliding to score if at all possible. I first played on plastic in 2012 and in the past 8 years can think of one occasion where a player did not score in the corner because they modified the way they tried to ground the ball due to the surface. This isn't a factor when it comes to injuries. 3. They are firmer than start of the season dry pitches, and have very little give in terms of players landing on them. There is also very little give in terms of traction and I personally have experienced turned ankles on a few occasions as my studs have stuck while being tackled and I have 'gone over' on the joint. I haven't experienced this on grass. In terms of grazing, I have picked up bad grazes on dry pitches at the start/end of a season, but these have always tended to be from one big slide and usually on a hip/thigh. I don't usually pick up grazes all over my knees and elbows from them. Whereas on plastic, almost every contact creates grazing particularly to the knees and elbows, while the big grazes to hips/thighs also occur. I have concerns about the regularity with which this can happen. 4. Yes, undoubtedly. I have played on one this year which was significantly worse than any other I've encountered, but I dislike all and have issues with even the 'best' plastic pitch. 5. Yes, see previous answers. Also grass mitigates for a lot. There are exceptions - the surface I played on in a promotion playoff last year was ridiculously poor. 6. Not as far as I can see, due to the totally different nature of the game. Yes footballers will graze their hips/thighs on plastic surfaces, but how often do they hit the ground? Playing in my position as a back 3 and sometime auxiliary centre, I could reasonably expect to make 15+ carries and 15+ tackles per game, plus hitting 20-30 rucks. That could result in as many as 60 contacts with the ground. It's interesting to not football moved on from plastic pitches more than 20 years ago. I think rugby is pretty unique in terms of the interaction between player and playing surface. The closest direct comparison would be American Football, but again the number of contacts between ground and player are low - a running back in a run heavy team might expect around 15 carries per game, resulting in perhaps 10-12 tackles, assuming they make it to the sideline on a few carries. That's a significantly lowered amount of contact with the playing surface. RE: 'Synthetic blend' surfaces, I've not had the pleasure but from what I have seen of them on TV, i.e. Wales home games on the Principality's Desso surface, they look to be very good but they are hugely expensive and take a lot of maintenance.
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Mark W-J
Coaching staff Joined: 22 May 2007 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 3683 |
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Talking to the dad of one of our players when we were at Grasshoppers a few weeks ago, he was saying that his sons hate them. The biggest complaint was that their knees are ripped to shreds, and they often wake up with the bedsheets stuck to them and they have to peel them off, scabs and all.
The other problem I've heard of is that there's no give in them, so when players change direction their studs get snagged, causing injuries to knees and ankles. I think on hard pitches the studs don't break the surface, whereas on artificial pitches there's enough depth for the studs to get purchase, but when you twist the soil would break around the studs to allow more freedom of movement.
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Raider999
World Cup Winner Joined: 18 Jan 2013 Location: Crawley Status: Offline Points: 4480 |
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I believe artificial pitches were in abundance in the Netherlands for football and better ball skills were attributed to their use.
However, I remember reading some time ago that they had stopped building them especially for junior use for the injuries highlighted above - primarily ankle or knees. The desso pitches may be much better - at what cost? I haven't seen a cost comparison between desso and fully artificial pitches, both in terms of initial cost and maintenance. Having played social hockey when the move to artificial took place, I never wore studded boots - only rubber multi-pimpled trainers. |
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RAID ON
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Camquin
World Cup Winner Joined: 01 Jun 2007 Location: Cambridge Status: Offline Points: 11425 |
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Fewer scrums in Hockey. Astro was better than some of the earlier sand and shale based hockey pitches. |
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Sweeney Delenda Est
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Raider999
World Cup Winner Joined: 18 Jan 2013 Location: Crawley Status: Offline Points: 4480 |
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Agreed on all counts - also far better than on grass - even in the short time I played the pitches were developing regularly. |
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RAID ON
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backrowb
World Cup Winner Joined: 07 Nov 2013 Location: Gods own county Status: Offline Points: 1664 |
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Desso pitches are much cheaper than 3G, but you can't use them nearly as much.
On worn, hard, grass pitches you would get abrasion injuries but 3g injuries are more akin to a friction burn. I haven't met a player yet that prefers 3G to grass
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Albert Fishwick
World Cup Winner Joined: 09 Apr 2009 Location: Leeds Status: Offline Points: 1063 |
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It would have to be. I still have scars and bits stuck under my skin from 40 years ago! Seems completely wrong for rugby to me though.
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That's easy for you to say.
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WEvans
World Cup Winner Joined: 08 Dec 2016 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 1456 |
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Not when i played hockey
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Dad
World Cup Winner Joined: 03 Oct 2013 Location: berks Status: Offline Points: 494 |
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I only know from watching as a parent.
Have seen a fair few games on Maidenheads (which is made the by the company that then laid Allianz Park i think) Have seen Exeter & Ding's pitches and also several of the RFU AGP's I would say at lower levels (age grade and 2's 3's level) where players are less fit you tend to notice by 60mins fwds are "flopping" into rucks and when they do that you get knees into heads and people just not in full control of their impacts which is dangerous. At a higher level it is the pure mechanics of high speed/force impacts between skin and artificial grass causes friction which causes heat which causes burnlike grazes
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