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ARTICLE
Players prefer it, so grass it is at Heinz Field
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
By
Teresa Varley After
much discussion and reviewing the options available, the Steelers decided that
the playing surface at Heinz Field will remain natural
grass. One of
the key factors in the decision was that the Steelers players preferred playing
on grass over any type of artificial turf. “Our
players and coaches, and the whole staff here, everybody had a chance to
participate in the discussion and everyone was in favor of sticking with the
grass,” said Steelers president Art Rooney, II. “I
think if you ask every player in the league the simple question ‘would you
rather play on grass or artificial?’ it would be predominantly grass. The
artificial I think is something they’re willing to live with in most cases and
they rate some surfaces better than others, but the majority of them definitely
want to practice on grass and prefer playing the games on grass. It’s been that
way for a long time in my experience.” The
initial plan is to continue to use DD GrassMaster, a form of natural grass that
they have used since 2003. Denver, Green Bay and Philadelphia all currently use
GrassMaster as well. The GrassMaster at Heinz Field would need to be redone this
off-season, something the Steelers are planning on. “We’ll
do what we’ve done the last few years, which is to do a fairly major reseeding
of it,” said Rooney. “We don’t do it every year, but this year because we
brought in the sod and laid it on top of it, we have to go back and reseed
it.
Heinz
Field will continue to be used by the University of Pittsburgh and WPIAL high
school playoff games will be played there in November. Last year the Steelers
re-sod the field following the high school playoffs, just two days before they
played on Monday Night Football. A torrential downpour two days later made for
less than desirable playing conditions when the Steelers hosted the Miami
Dolphins. The
team did ask the NFL to schedule them on the road that weekend, something they
were unable to do last year. “They
send out a survey every year to all of the teams and say tell us where the
problems are if you have conflicts,” said Rooney. “We always tell them we don’t
want a game that weekend. Last year they called us and talked to us and said it
will screw the schedule up if we can’t put you at home that weekend. We said
we’ll live with it but we don’t want to do it on a regular basis. They know
that’s not a weekend that we want to be home. Normally they have been able to
schedule around that. “I
forget what the alternative was they had for us last year if we didn’t play that
weekend, but it was something where we were going to have a strange set of
games. We understand it’s difficult to put the schedule together. A lot of teams
have different situations they have to work around. More often than not they
have managed to not schedule us at home that weekend and we made the same
request this year.” The
team might re-sod the field following the high school playoffs again this year,
with the hope of being on the road that weekend and allowing a longer turnaround
time until it’s used again. “I
think the piece of it we have to analyze is whether we do the same thing we did
last year after the high school games in terms of brining in the sod,” said
Rooney. “Even though the first game was not a success in terms of how it worked
out, we think it is a viable option to bring in the new turf after the high
school playoff season. “That
is a piece of the puzzle we are looking at the best way to do that. Our people
feel like we learned some lessons and we can do a better job with a little bit
more time in between games. We will look at that. I think things can go better
than they did this year from the standpoint of schedule and other
items.”
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