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Netherlands' Wesley Snijder, centre, applauds supporters during a team training session in Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, June 9, 2010. Netherlands are preparing for the upcoming soccer World Cup, where they will play in Group E. (AP / Frank Augstein) World Cup

Canadian company supplies grass for World Cup

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South Africa is getting set to host one of the biggest shows on earth. Soccer's World Cup kicks off on Friday and the marquee event is bringing the country together like never before.
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The director of western sales at Pickseed Canada talks about the Canadian grass seed supplied for the World Cup soccer fields.
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Second in a four-part World Cup series: The Canadian-Somali talks about his hit single and new World Cup song 'Wavin' Flag.'
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First in a four-part World Cup series: From apartheid to hosting the world - how far has South Africa come in the past 16 years?

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Netherlands' Wesley Snijder, centre, applauds supporters during a team training session in Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, June 9, 2010. Netherlands are preparing for the upcoming soccer World Cup, where they will play in Group E. (AP / Frank Augstein) World Cup

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Netherlands' Wesley Snijder, centre, applauds supporters during a team training session in Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, June 9, 2010. Netherlands are preparing for the upcoming soccer World Cup, where they will play in Group E. (AP / Frank Augstein)

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Date: Wed. Jun. 9 2010 8:27 AM ET

Canada's biggest soccer star is tough, bounces back quickly, and was designed for one purpose: the playing fields of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Unfortunately, the above paragraph isn't describing a Canadian athlete, but rather a species of grass that was engineered especially for soccer's ultimate competition, being held in Cape Town, S.A.

All World Cup pitches, including practice fields, are covered in turf grown on Manitoba farms by Pickseed Canada.

Terry Scott, the director of western sales for the company, told CTV's Canada AM his company has spent years coming up with the perfect product for the world's premier soccer tourney.

"This was a four year project for our company, developing the special perennial rye grasses that can handle the kind of activity these particular soccer pitches put it under," Scott said from Winnipeg.

"These were bred to handle the higher stress of the activity, the cleats, the tearing up of the grass, they have very quick growth habits, quick recovery habits."

In Canada, ideal grass seed mixes contain more blue grasses and fescues, which are better equipped to handle the cold winters. But South Africa's climate is better suited for perennial rye grasses, which grow at a denser rate and create a soccer pitch that is similar to a carpet, Scott said.

It also recovers quickly, which is an essential trait for pitches where dozens of elite-level games will be played in a short period of time.

The two varieties provided by Pickseed are a Zoom perennial ryegrass and SR4600 perennial ryegrass. They have a germination period of between three and eight days, and are mixed with a blend of Kentucky bluegrass which helps the grass spread quickly.

They ryegrass was produced by growers in Beausejour, Ste. Anne, Starbuck and a fourth in the Red River Valley.

"We are very proud, we're a Canadian company and we certainly like to wave the Canadian and the Manitoba flag," Scott said.

The only disappointment, he said, is that Canada will not field a team at the tournament which begins on Friday. Some have noted, Scott said, that having a Canadian team play on Canadian grass would be akin to burying a loonie at centre ice, which was done secretly at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics -- where the Canadian men and women both won gold.

Comments are now closed for this story

Andrew Chobaniuk
said

@Prof. Pye CharrtThanks for the negative off-topic tirade. Guess what! I'm not an immigrant, neither is my father, or in fact his father either, but we play soccer, we enjoy soccer, chances are my family has lived in this country for more generations than you. So the next time you want to stereotype and make semi-racist remarks about the sport I love, use your brain first. :)


silly
said

...slow news day.


Walter (Winnipeg)
said

Way to go Manitoba. Don't undermine the spirit and determination of Canadians. Even though we're not so good in soccer.


geo-vaunnie
said

nothing better than a bit of 100% B.C Grass!!!!!!


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

Three cheers for our grass industry! Playing soccer provides great cardiovascular exercise. Watching soccer is like witnessing paint dry. You need an abundance of alcohol to feel like something's actually happening, and that one or two goals in an entire game is all the "excitement" you can handle. What a snorefest. It's the world's "biggest" sport based upon the physical participation factor, and the basic requirement of just a beat-up ball and makeshift goals. Kids who live in poverty and destitution can easily play the game. Spectatorship is a joke (other than for cheering parents of kids). In North America, soccer playing has grown exponentially only because immigration has changed the cultural and sporting landscape...and we now "need" countless evening and weekend-afternoon soccer games to, allegedly, keep our youth from becoming professionally lazy and fat. Every World Cup means "International Flag Day" in Canada. What's my point? Ah, well, I'm not a soccer fan. ...Spare me a hooligan retort.


Dean in Abby
said

What kind of grass man..


TEA in SK
said

And let the games begin...

Edb(Hamilton)
said

It's a shame the beautiful game is to be held in such a lawless wasteland. Well done communist ANC!Not a good choice for the most popular sporting event on the planet. Anyway, can't wait for the start and grateful to be cheering on Deutschland from the patio of my clean comfortable local...Ballack or no Ballack!


Jennifer, Toronto
said

Let's not forget the other "Canadian Presence" - Kannan [sp?] and that wonderful song - that stays in your head every time you hear it.!!!


Jacqueline Godard
said

Now we have the perfect grass let's put together a great team!


Stu from London
said

You're going to need some good Canadian grass if you want to enjoy soccer!


spaz
said

Well it is nice to see Pickseed has "won a medal" for growing grass.As a farmer I have grown Pickseed corn in the past.......do they give medals for poor yield ??


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