You won’t believe what the NFLPA is doing to force grass fields on owners thanks to FIFA World Cup

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May 22, 2026 - 13:54
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You won’t believe what the NFLPA is doing to force grass fields on owners thanks to FIFA World Cup
Photo by Rich Graessle/PPI/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Photo by Rich Graessle/PPI/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

For years, players have talked about how artificial turf isn’t the best playing surface. But a new poll has started to stir up a fresh wave of criticism over it.

According to the NFLPA, 92% of 1,700 players polled said they’d rather play on grass than artificial turf, and that’s more than enough to fuel the ongoing conversation.

The timing around the 2026 World Cup has made it louder too, with several NFL stadiums set to install high-quality grass for the tournament before switching back to turf for football.

That contradiction is exactly what the union has been highlighting this month. It gives the argument a cleaner shape than the usual injury-study back and forth.

NFLPA executive director JC Tretter hasn’t been shy about the union’s stance. He says players want “high-quality grass fields” and has pointed to World Cup preparations as proof that top-tier surfaces can be delivered when there’s enough motivation.

It’s a key shift in the conversation. The players now have both the numbers and real-world examples to back up their demands, especially when owners have shown they can hit those standards for other sports.

Tretter has also made it clear that players aren’t just asking for any patch of grass. They want consistent, well-maintained fields — not something thrown together just to tick a box. It’s about raising the baseline, not settling for less than what turf offers now.

Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images
Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images

The NFL’s response remains the same

The NFL has stuck to its position, focusing on standardisation and testing rather than switching entirely to grass. The league’s joint field-surface framework with the NFLPA sets mandatory practices for both artificial and natural fields, requiring teams replacing surfaces to use approved options.

That approach frames the debate as one of quality control rather than one material being inherently unsafe. It is more about how well a surface is maintained and monitored than what it is made of.

The league says it evaluates safety based on performance standards: hardness, traction, friction, infill depth, maintenance routines and pregame testing. Under that model, poor grass fields can be just as risky as turf, while synthetic surfaces that meet those criteria are considered safe enough.

But for many players, that argument does not seem convincing anymore. With 92% now saying they want grass fields, the league’s focus on process sounds less like a solution and more like an excuse to avoid change.

The World Cup has made the optics worse

Seven NFL stadiums that normally use artificial turf are expected to install natural grass for World Cup matches: AT&T Stadium, Gillette Stadium, Lumen Field, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, MetLife Stadium, NRG Stadium and SoFi Stadium.

But these aren’t simple swaps. Several will need extensive infrastructure changes, including new grow lights and irrigation systems. It’s why the players feel like their argument has more weight now.

Owners can still lean on cost, maintenance and flexibility as reasons for sticking with turf. But players have a simple counter: “Why does it become doable when another sport demands it?”

Player safety remains a key part of the conversation

While the World Cup spotlight has brought new attention to the issue, player safety is still a major part of it. The union has cited long-term data linking turf to higher rates of non-contact lower-extremity injuries, including knee and ankle injuries.

The league, however, points to advancements in surface technology and updated testing protocols. They believe these measures are better for managing injury risk than simply requiring grass everywhere.

This is where the back-and-forth tends to repeat. The league sticks with its focus on measurable field conditions, while players lean more into how their bodies respond over time and what they feel reduces wear and tear.

The conversation around NFL field surfaces used to fade into the background, often getting lost in medical studies and familiar debates. But the landscape has changed. The union now has stronger public backing, overwhelming player preference data, and a clear example of stadiums installing the exact standard players have been calling for.

While that 92% figure does not trigger an immediate rule change, it does make it much harder for owners to keep acting as if there’s still uncertainty within locker rooms.

The World Cup will come and go, but the images of NFL stadiums rolling out premium grass will remain useful to the union. Once players see what’s possible for football is still being asked to accept less.

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