Packers summon LB NFL over turf use after Rashan Gary’s injury

The Green Bay Packers have lost too many players to the turf monster, and quarterback De’Vondre Campbell wants the NFL to take action.

There is a pervasive problem in the NFL, one that has plagued the league for years.

Because of it, jobs are shortened, teams are destroyed, and years of hard work in the field fall apart.

And all because the NFL owners continue to succumb to the turf crowds.

It’s not about blocking a multi-purpose arena, Allegiant Stadium and State Farm Stadium even showed it Retractable all grass fields Probably. And for outdoor playgrounds like Haymark Stadium In Orchard Park, there really isn’t any excuse to use lawn.

And for NFL billionaire owners and investors, the price of a natural turf field has proven to be worth it time and time again. Unless the lawn is intended to waste enemies with unnecessary, avoidable injuries.

Packers linebacker de Funder Campbell has seen enough. After seeing his colleague rashan running Suffers an injury at the end of the season in Ford FieldCampbell called on NFL owners to collectively invest in grass fields across the league.

Campbell explained to those who have no idea how devastating turf roofs can be to athletes:

Packers LPD Founder Campbell joins chorus of voices calling for NFL lawn to be banned

The argument against turf is easy: it’s harmful to athletes.

Unfortunately, despite the voices of athletes and evidence speaking against the turf, there are still 16 NFL teams at 14 stadiums that continue to use artificial turf, according to Fox’s Brandon Ingram. As teams in Los Angeles and New York City share stadiums, the turf surface at SoFi Stadium and MetLife Stadium puts more players at risk each week, despite the Rams and Giants rated each. More than 5 billion dollars.

Former Packers Center JC sequinwho is now the president of the NFLPA, wrote at length explaining why turf is dangerous and what the NFL can do to prevent damage.

“Players have a 28% higher rate of non-contact lower limb injuries when playing on artificial turf. Among those non-contact injuries, players have a 32% higher rate of non-contact knee injuries on turf and a staggering 69% rate of non-contact foot/ankle injuries. Touching on the grass compared to the grass.”

Fans from every NFL fan base can recall a moment in recent history when one of their favorite players fell to a pointless injury at the end of the season. Los Angeles Chargers Cornback J.C. Jackson, an NFL cornerback who built an impressive resume with the New England Patriots, barely saw the field with his new team due to an injury related to his role.

Next, new evidence echoes Campbell’s observation about the absence of turf: The effects that cause concussions are “much greater” on turf than on turf.

Not only should people at every level of the NFL organization, including coaches, general managers and owners, be excited about investing in turf, but there’s no obstacle to making turf possible everywhere, Tretter says.

“Cold climate teams such as the Packers, Steelers and Browns successfully maintain natural grass fields. Indoor pitches should not be a barrier to grass fields either. Cardinals and Raiders figured out how to provide natural grass for playing surface indoors. Agriculturally, turf field surfaces can be used Natural everywhere.

With the data presented on how turf poses an unnecessary risk to athletes, it is unfair for any organization to allow players out onto a field that could cause them to suffer a worse concussion or an avoidable ACL tear. As it stands, the turf is such a hazard in the workplace that billionaire owners are tasked with removing it from their pitches.

As Campbell says, it’s time to have some of the millions of NFL owners pull players and invest in a playing environment that doesn’t hurt them.



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