Dallas pitch ready for last hurrah
July 14, 2026 00:00:00
A worker cuts the grass at the Dallas Stadium in Arlington on Monday (as per BST), ahead of the 2026 World Cup football tournament semi-final match between France and Spain tonight (Wednesday at 100 am as per BST) —AFP
DALLAS, July 13 (Reuters): When France take on Spain with a place in the World Cup final at stake, the encounter is guaranteed to mark the end for one key participant in Wednesday's (1:00am as per BST) match: the Dallas Stadium pitch.
It took five years of research to perfect the surfaces used across the tournament, and for the renowned stadium in Texas that involved cultivating a full-sized pitch on top of the field used by the Dallas Cowboys.
"What we're doing here is hosting the biggest football tournament in the world, these are the best players in the world so we want to provide the best surfaces for them," says Ian Craig, FIFA's pitch manager for Dallas Stadium.
Turf scientists and groundskeepers worked with the University of Tennessee, Michigan State University and FIFA's pitch management team to ensure the pitches used across all 16 venues plus the training sites at the first 48-team World Cup were consistent in terms of how the ball rolls and bounces.
"It's not just about having green grass. We have to make sure that these pitches play the way that these elite-level players are used to, which is obviously where years of research and hard work have gone into," Craig said.
Dallas, one of three indoor venues used, has presented unique challenges due to a lack of sunlight and the use of air-conditioning, meaning grass that is not native to Texas and can handle low temperatures had to be shipped in from Colorado.
Recently-installed grow lamps have been suspended from the roof of Dallas Stadium and are moved into position on non-match days to maintain a surface constructed above the artificial turf normally used by the Cowboys.
"We're standing four-and-a-half feet above where the NFL field is, just in order to fit this within the stadium, but we have a full soil profile in there," says Craig.