I heard practice field turf was installed in the Loftus Center, anyone else think that may be the same turf we'll see implemented in ND stadium?
Nice bump!
This is from Eric Hanson yesterday, FWIW:
"Eric Hansen:
Glad to be back. The chats are fun for me. They also sometimes give me good ideas for stories. ... I spoke to ND athletic director Jack Swarbrick a few weeks ago. I am kind of surprised there as not been an announcement yet. If ND stays with natural grass, it will have to dig down deeper and get rid of the old root structure of the old sod, something they hadn't been doing. Whatever decision they make -- and I believe it will be FieldTurf --- they have to start that process the day after graduation in May to be ready for the fall. Swarbrick said "tradition" will not factor into the decision. It will be what's best for the program.
This argument kills me. "Turf makes you play faster so we're at a disadvantage by playing on natural grass!"Finally. I'm not sure I really care, but speed kills and apparently everyone plays faster on turf. Couple that with the dismal shape our field has looked the past couple seasons and I'm all for the switch. ND will still be ND, because it's bigger than what it plays on. It's who and how they play on it that counts.
This argument kills me. "Turf makes you play faster so we're at a disadvantage by playing on natural grass!"
Spoiler alert: Playing on turf will make the other team faster, too.
I think I've been over this with you before haha, but I'll toss my $0.02 in anyway:
I think a speed advantage is more pronounced when on turf. If ND is faster than Purdue on grass, their advantage will be even larger on turf.
I think grass is the great equalizer, especially in poor conditions.
That's kind of my point. We're not playing B1G bruisers anymore. We're playing Florida State, Miami, North Carolina, Clemson, etc. "Southern speed" is a very real thing. I think you're making a mistake that we'll always (or even a large majority of the time) be the faster team on the field.
I'll borrow an "Old School" line from A Boy Named Sue by Johnny Cash:
"Kickin' and a-gougin' in the mud and the blood and the beer."
It strikes me as apropos to the history of Fightin' Irish football.
The old sod is the best sod ...
Rockne would have already put in Field Turf by now if he was still around.
If we were still a team running the Triple Option, I could see there being some benefits to keeping natural grass as the poor weather in Indiana could cause problems for the Florida State type teams we play. Given the fact we're a Spread team now and we want to utilize our speed against slower teams, it doesn't make sense to stick with a field surface that quickly deteriorates in bad weather.
And wouldn't it be nice for the team to actually be able to practice a little more on the same surface they will be playing on when it matters. Can't do that now for fear of tearing up the field any more then it already is.

Yeah, theres this fact too! The LaBar practice facility is comprised of mostly Field Turf already. They just replaced the artificial field in the Indoor facility as well. Why play on grass at all if we're going to practice on Field Turf? There should absolutely be consistency here.
Related note: The LaBar family season ticket holders are located directly behind our season tickets![]()
This argument kills me. "Turf makes you play faster so we're at a disadvantage by playing on natural grass!"
Spoiler alert: Playing on turf will make the other team faster, too.
Think a step further wizard. I'm saying that it appears we have a comparative advantage when speed is emphasized. Kelly has been recruiting speed and I'd put up Will Fuller and Chris Brown and Tarean Folston and Greg Bryant against any of our opponents. When traction is lost because the surface is mangled, that neutralizes speed and takes away one of our strengths. When you have a surface that emphasizes speed and remains intact, the faster team has an advantage, and it appears Kelly cares about speed.
Wonder if our poorer relative performance at home would be neutralized by field turf?
Wonder if practicing half turf/half grass, with home games all grass causes O timing issues? I played just when turf was coming in, played one to two games a year on turf, and I was so slow. I don't remember it making much of a matter. (laughing quickly)
Think a step further wizard. I'm saying that it appears we have a comparative advantage when speed is emphasized. Kelly has been recruiting speed and I'd put up Will Fuller and Chris Brown and Tarean Folston and Greg Bryant against any of our opponents. When traction is lost because the surface is mangled, that neutralizes speed and takes away one of our strengths. When you have a surface that emphasizes speed and remains intact, the faster team has an advantage, and it appears Kelly cares about speed.
Think a step further wizard. I'm saying that it appears we have a comparative advantage when speed is emphasized. Kelly has been recruiting speed and I'd put up Will Fuller and Chris Brown and Tarean Folston and Greg Bryant against any of our opponents. When traction is lost because the surface is mangled, that neutralizes speed and takes away one of our strengths. When you have a surface that emphasizes speed and remains intact, the faster team has an advantage, and it appears Kelly cares about speed.
If footing is sloppy, it's sloppy for everyone. The difference in speed between two teams is the same on either surface.
It's like playing the lottery. The odds stay the same just like the difference in speed stays the same. Just because a number hasn't been called, doesn't mean it has a better chance to be called than a number called in the previous game. The faster team will always be faster.
Your argument is too abstract, it's not as simple as putting restrictor plates on the two teams. Sloppy turf has a greater effect on players with more speed. Faster players cut and stop and start more often than players that emphasize their strength. Cutting and quick stops make slipping far more likely than putting your head down and driving your legs.
Also if your argument is true and the surface effects both teams equally then it stands to reason that in a matchup of a speed team vs a power team the advantage goes to the power team. Even though the speeds are equally reduced the power teams advantage is unchanged. Doesn't make much sense if we are building our team around speed to placate to teams like MSU and Stanford.
Lol. I remember u "having a source" about turf being installed like 2yrs ago. Adsnorri that is.
Your argument is too abstract, it's not as simple as putting restrictor plates on the two teams. Sloppy turf has a greater effect on players with more speed. Faster players cut and stop and start more often than players that emphasize their strength. Cutting and quick stops make slipping far more likely than putting your head down and driving your legs.
Also if your argument is true and the surface effects both teams equally then it stands to reason that in a matchup of a speed team vs a power team the advantage goes to the power team. Even though the speeds are equally reduced the power teams advantage is unchanged. Doesn't make much sense if we are building our team around speed to placate to teams like MSU and Stanford.