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Artificial Pitches. . . .Need to go!


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On 06/02/2020 at 23:24, Diamonds are Forever said:

 

I've watched us play on a plastic pitch for 10 years and can assure you the bounce is very inconsistent. It depends what way that bit of 'grass' has been combed or what way it has been flattened. When the pitch is dry it is horrendous to watch teams play football on it, the ball constantly bobbles and the pitch is so slow.

I'm sure this will be worse on our pitch because it's old and now poor quality. New pitches shouldn't have these issues to the same extent.

The plastic v grass debate is a bit pointless, it shouldn't be about what materials the pitch is made of, should just be the end result of how good it is to play on. A good plastic pitch is better than a bad grass one. A good grass pitch is better than any plastic one. If you can't afford to maintain a quality grass pitch (like most clubs in Scotland) a good plastic one is a good option.

The 4g pitch that Killie have is sensational. No grass pitch comes close.

 

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13 minutes ago, the west curve said:

The blue sea of Ibrox is not fit for a game today. The 21st century and a club can’t provide a playable pitch. 

We tried the hybrid experiment and it never worked. 

Pretty sure arts had problems with their hybrid pitch too, back to grass.

 

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If clubs aren’t going to bother looking after their pitch properly - and the last two weeks of nonsense bear this out at every level of the national game - then they should be obliged to install artificial pitches instead. This isn’t the 1970s and waiting on some glorified swamp to pass inspection just hours before kickoff is a waste of everyone’s time and effort.

Protect it or lose it, it should be that straightforward.

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  • 1 month later...
2 hours ago, craigkillie said:

Astonished to see that even an article whinging about plastic pitches in the MLS is written by a Scottish journalist.

"In fact, there isn’t an artificial pitch at any of England’s 42 senior league venues. "

He appears to be getting Scotland and England mixed up as well.

 

Edited by Sergeant Wilson
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The primary motivation for installing the pitch was not because it was easier to maintain. It has allowed the club to train in Kilmarnock rather than having to fork out a fortune renting a facility in Glasgow or elsewhere.

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8 hours ago, ancientnoise said:

Our grass pitch lasted well over 100 years and was always considered one of the best grass pitches in the country. And face it, if you can't grow anything in Ayrshire soil, you're a buffoon.

We now have an poor emulation of that, and people are right to complain.

 

 

You'll probably hate this but I'm going to agree with you, it probably was the best pitch in the country for playing football. 

Obviously for kilmarnock there's obviously quite a few benefits of using an artificial pitch.

 

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