Report on Sale V Gloucester from last March which illustrates my point about the colloquial use of the term "Cabbage Patch":
"A dreadful playing surface -
the pitch resembled a cabbage patch - did not help matters but Sale fully deserved their victory against a Gloucester side decimated by injury and Six Nations call-ups".[/quote]
The quote actually illustrates how a bad playing surface is of no value to a rugby club. And there are plenty of football grounds (Old Trafford, Chelsea) where the descriptiion has been applied over the years. I don;t think the use of a cliche by a journalist gives much credence to a claim that London Irish have destroyed our pitch !
LOL like a poor pitch affects Rugby - a game where the ball is mostly played OFF the ground, as much as it does in football, where the ball is mostly played ON the ground.
Muskrat As for evidence - take a look at the pitch!!
That is evidence that the pitch is patchy, not why it is patchy. Given there is a lot more football played than rugby the arguement would be stronger (if a bit daft) that the football is the problem.
LOL. Three words - cause and effect. Rugby damages pitches more than football. Many pitches used soley for football quite happily survive a season relatively intact compared to ours.
Muskrat I would turn the argument around and say since we've been at the Madejski Stadium, there has always been rugby there, save for one brief spell when Richmond went under and rugby temporarily ceased on the hallowed turf.
So we don't know what the pitch would be like without them there -
But we do know that even with them there the pitch has been fine for a number of seasons. Which completely blows you arguement. You can;t have your cake and eat it. if the rugby causes the problem then how come it only does it some years ?
LOL. It's not just some years, the pitch has been consistently bad at the Madstad, even in our first season there - I remember in 1998 people saying that the state of the pitch was affecting performances.
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Muskrat It's no use just putting on the blinkers and being in continual denial about it, the Club needs to take a positive decision on what it values more - the income from the Rugby, or a decent playing surface.
But you are the one with blinkers becasue you have just assumed that the rugby is the cause, despite the lack of anything other than a prejudice to back it up. The rugby is obvioulsy part of the cause as has been acknowledged by everyone including the club. The choice of either a good pitch or rugby isn't relevant. Both are possible and people need to take the blinkers off and stop being anti rugby !
LOL I'm not assuming anything - the pitch has been relayed at least twice that I can remember, both times using the current "state of the art technology", yet it still ends up in poor condition every year. Taking some of the heaviest load off the pitch must help it fulfil its primary purpose as a football pitch. That's not being anti Rugby, that's just logic.
Unfortunately we both know that the one thing that would settle the argument - taking the Rugby load off the pitch, isn't going to happen.