Salem Radio Network News Thursday, December 4, 2025

Sports

NFL-League introduces mandatory field standards, sets 2028 deadline for surface replacements

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By Angelica Medina

Dec 4 (Reuters) – The National Football League unveiled sweeping new mandatory field standards on Thursday that will require all 32 teams to select from a list of approved surfaces starting in 2026, with existing turf needing to be replaced by the end of the 2027 season.

The initiative represents the league’s most significant step toward standardising playing conditions across its stadiums, addressing long-standing concerns about field quality and player safety. 

“Starting next season in 2026, all clubs will have the opportunity to pick from a library of approved and accredited NFL fields,” Nick Pappas, NFL’s field director, told reporters on Thursday. 

“Anyone who has an existing field will have to replace it by the end of the 2027 season, ahead of the 2028 season.”

The new standards introduce the league’s first-ever traction ceiling, an upper limit on how much grip a surface can provide. The measure aims to prevent excessive traction that could stress players’ joints and increase injury risk.

“Through our athlete research, we’ve determined that there is an amount that the player needs to be able to make the appropriate football manoeuvres,” Pappas explained. “But there’s also a point where the athlete could generate more traction than necessary.”

The NFL will conduct its first joint testing event with its Players Association next week, where synthetic turf manufacturers will submit products for pass-fail evaluation. The process mirrors the league’s successful helmet safety programme, which phases out underperforming equipment.

Two new testing devices drive the standards: “The Beast”, which measures traction by replicating NFL athlete movements, and “The Strike”, which gauges field firmness and energy return. Both tools were developed using extensive player research.

Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer, said injury data showed no statistically significant difference in lower extremity non-contact injuries between natural grass and artificial fields over recent seasons, though he emphasised the league was moving beyond crude surface comparisons towards measuring specific biophysical properties.

According to Pappas, the average synthetic field has a lifespan of around two-and-a-half years, meaning that most would naturally need to be replaced before the 2028 deadline, regardless of the new mandate.

WORLD CUP IMPLICATIONS

The timing coincides with preparations for the 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico, with 11 league stadiums set to stage soccer matches. To meet requirements set by FIFA, they are expected to convert to hybrid turf surfaces.

However, Pappas said soccer’s global governing body did not influence NFL field decisions, though they shared knowledge and research. 

“We know there’s a major disparity in size, style of play, speed and strength,” Pappas said. “Our game is a lot more intense and, with that and our players being larger and faster, we demand a lot more from our surface.”

FIFA will maintain exclusive control of venues during the tournament, eliminating the scheduling conflicts that typically plague multi-use NFL facilities.

“While FIFA is coming here this summer, they’ll have exclusivity to every venue that they’re using, meaning there won’t be a college game before a FIFA game,” Pappas said.

This exclusivity would allow them to install temporary surfaces without the wear and tear NFL stadiums regularly face from college football games, concerts and other events.

(Reporting by Angelica Medina in Mexico City; editing by Clare Fallon)

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