The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Artificial turf may be factor in games

Ball acts differentl­y than on real grass, a surface players prefer.

- By Doug Roberson droberson@ajc.com

Though Mercedes-Benz Stadium may be a palace for athletes with its expansive locker rooms, hydrothera­py pools and warmup areas, the most important factor in determinin­g how Atlanta United will play in its new home, and whether it makes the playoffs, will be the artificial turf.

Nine of the team’s remaining 10 games, including the first at the $1.5 billion stadium Sunday against Dallas, will be played on synthetic surfaces. That includes eight at home. The team is sixth in the Eastern Conference, with 36 points. It trails third-place Chicago by eight points but has played three fewer games.

Making the playoffs, and earning the best possible seeding, may come down to the rolls, bounces and speed of the ball on what the players hope is a wet FieldTurf Revolution 360 surface. The ball rolls faster on wet turf.

“For me, the only thing that could affect us is the turf, that we don’t adapt quickly to it,” midfielder Hector Villalba said.

The team was 6-2-1 on the grass surface of its early-season home at Georgia Tech’s Bobby Dodd Stadium.

The team has trained at Mercedes-Benz Stadium at least once, and the players gave the field a thumbs-up after a training session that lasted less than two hours. The team also has a pitch at its facility in Marietta that has the same type of turf and the same dimensions (75 yards wide by 115 yards long) as what it will play on in its next six consecutiv­e games. The team trained on the artificial field twice last week and will train at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Friday.

“We will train as much as we can without overdoing it,” Atlanta United midfielder Jeff Larentowic­z said.

Playing on turf poses mental and physical X-factors that at least one Atlanta United player has seen.

Fullback Greg Garza played on turf at the home of his parent club, Tijuana, from 201215. Because players prefer grass, some can’t even stomach the idea of not playing on it. Tijuana won a championsh­ip in 2012 on its artificial turf. One of the teams that played for the MLS Cup last year, Seattle, plays on turf at its home.

“It’s a different ballgame,” he said. “In Tijuana, we used it to our advantage. Every other team in Mexico came to the turf field already complainin­g about it. That’s where we used it to our advantage.”

Villalba also played at Tijuana and its artificial turf while on loan from Atlanta United last season. He said using the artificial field at the training center in Marietta will be key.

“When you train on turf, it’s easier to adapt to it,” he said. “As an away team, when you only train on it a couple of days ahead of time ...”

Physically, recovering from playing on turf can take a little bit longer for “us older guys,” team captain Michael Parkhurst said. With so many games in such a short period of time, Parkhurst said everyone will need to contribute quality minutes.

“It’s going to be virtually impossible for guys to play all eight games,” Parkhurst said. “Guys are going to have to step up, maybe guys that haven’t played a ton of minutes, thus far in the season.”

Atlanta United has played on turf four times this season, taking a respectabl­e five of 12 points: a 6-1 win at Minnesota United; a 0-0 draw at Seattle, which features the same turf used at Mercedes-Benz Stadium; a 1-1 draw at Portland, which also features the same turf; and a 3-1 loss at Vancouver.

In addition to the eight home games that will be played on turf, Atlanta United also will play on the synthetic surface at Gillette Stadium against New England on Sept. 30.

“With all of these games, it should happen pretty quickly for us,” Larentowic­z said.

 ??  ?? Midfielder Hector Villalba fears Atlanta United will take time to adapt to artificial turf.
Midfielder Hector Villalba fears Atlanta United will take time to adapt to artificial turf.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? ▲ The Falcons tried out the artificial turf at MercedesBe­nz Stadium at an exhibition game against the Arizona on Aug. 26.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ▲ The Falcons tried out the artificial turf at MercedesBe­nz Stadium at an exhibition game against the Arizona on Aug. 26.
 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ / MUNDOHISPA­NICO ?? ◄ Atlanta United manager Gerardo Martino and the team arrive at Bobby Dodd Stadium on July 29 for their last game at their Georgia Tech digs. Their next home game is at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Sunday against FC Dallas.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ / MUNDOHISPA­NICO ◄ Atlanta United manager Gerardo Martino and the team arrive at Bobby Dodd Stadium on July 29 for their last game at their Georgia Tech digs. Their next home game is at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Sunday against FC Dallas.

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