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Artificial Grass Blog
Blog of Artificial Grass Leisure, UK manufacturers of artificial grass products. ... Our artificial grass blog is a great way for us to share this knowledge and our ...www.artificial-grass.com/blog/HomeTurf-Synthetic/Artificial Grass Blog
We offer San Diego artificial grass of various face weights, fiber types, fiber ... and Miller Lite, artificial grass with thick blades or thin blades, you get ...www.sdhometurf.com/blog/index.phpChoice Floors Artificial Grass News Blog
A Guide to Buying Artificial Grass ... All Comments. Blog Archive. 2009 (8) April (2) Is Choice Floors Artificial Grass Really Maintenan...choicefloors.blogspot.com/Association of Synthetic Grass Installers
Association of synthetic turf and artificial grass installers present industry news, reports and market intelligence - studies, guides and supportwww.asgi.us/xwpSYNLawn Synthetic Grass - Artificial Grass News and Events
SYNLawn synthetic grass is the largest and only vertically integrated manufacturer of artificial grass products for lawns, landscapes, pets, dogs, golf putting ...www.synlawn.com/news/
Background
David Chaney -- who moved to Raleigh, North Carolina in 1960 and later served as dean of the North Carolina State University College of Textiles -- headed the team of RTP researchers who created the famous artificial turf. That accomplishment led Sports Illustrated to declare Chaney as the man "responsible for indoor major league baseball and millions of welcome mats." 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 became widespread in the 1970s and was installed in both indoor and outdoor stadiums used for baseball and gridiron football in the United States and Canada. Maintaining a grass playing surface indoors, while technically possible, is prohibitively expensive, while teams who chose to play on artificial surfaces outdoors did so because of the reduced maintenance cost, especially in colder climates with urban multi-purpose "cookie cutter" stadiums such as Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium, Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Stadium and Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium.
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thumb|left|Aspmyra, Norway: home of the soccerteam FK Bodø/Glimt
Association football

Some association football (soccer) clubs in Europe installed artificial surfaces in the 1980s, which were called plastic pitches (often derisively) in countries such as England. In England several professional club venues had adopted the pitches, QPR's Loftus Road, Luton Town's Kenilworth Road, Oldham Athletic's Boundary Park and Preston's Deepdale until the English FA banned them in 1988. Artificial turf gained a bad reputation on both sides of the Atlantic with fans and especially with players. The first artificial turfs were a far harder surface than grass, and soon became known as an unforgiving playing surface which was prone to cause more injuries, and in particular, more serious joint injuries, than would comparatively be suffered on a grass surface. Artificial turf was also regarded as aesthetically unappealing to many fans.
In 1981, London football 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 league. 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 returned to natural grass.
























