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Grass types

Injuries may be related to the type of grass used on sporting fields. In Australian football, with respect to ACL injuries, there are long-standing statistically-significant biases towards more injuries in the early months of the season and on grounds that are further to the north of Australia (in warmer climates). The early-season bias for ACL injuries also exists for natural grass surfaces in the NFL (American football) competition. There is an early-season ACL bias for the NFL on Astroturf surfaces in open air conditions but not on Astroturf surfaces in closed arenas. There is also no ‘southern’ or warm-climate bias demonstrated in the NFL. Further analysis of Australian football reveals that the risk of ACL injury is significantly lower on grounds that have perennial ryegrass as the major species, compared to bermudagrass. This explains both the warm-climate and early-season biases. There is only a minimal correlation between hardness, as measured on natural grass fields by the penetrometer, and ACL injury risk in Australian football. Perennial ryegrass, compared to other common turfgrass species such as bermudagrass, Kentucky bluegrass and annual bluegrass, generally leads to surface conditions with reduced shoe-surface traction. This is because perennial ryegrass produces less thatch and has fewer rhizomes (or stolons) which may create excess friction between the shoe cleats and grass layer. The use of perennial ryegrass is the best explanation for the lower ACL injury rates in the southern parts of Australia. The early-season bias exhibited in all examined competitions played on natural grass is likely to be related partly to the increased predominance of ryegrass in the latter stages of the season and partly to the decrease in thatch and lateral growth due to traffic during the season. Shown below are examples of the common types of grass used in Australian sports fields:

Couch (Bermuda) grass

Couch (Bermuda) grass

Couch (Bermuda) grass

Rye grass

Rye grass

Rye grass

Kikuyu grass

Poa annua

Modular system to lay grass

Field turf (artificial blades in soil)

Bare area of mud

Click to download the following .pdf papers researching the role of ground and grass conditions and injury in football:

Rye grass is associated with fewer non-contact ACL injuries than Bermuda grass (British J Sports Med .pdf)

Is there a relationship between ground and weather conditions and injury in football? (Sports Med review .pdf)

The relationship between surface and weather conditions and injury in the NFL (Med Sci Sports Exer .pdf)

The northern bias for injuries in the AFL (Australian Turfgrass Management)

The use of the Penetrometer to measure hardness on football grounds (poster .pdf)

The AFL Penetrometer study - work in progress (J Sci Med Sport .pdf)

Intrinsic and extrinsic risk factors for ACL injuries in the AFL (Am J Sports Med .pdf)

 






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