MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, is growing its World Cup playing surface from grass brought in from another state after its intended local supply failed, CBS Sports reported 1. The turf from the stadium's planned New Jersey farm did not survive the winter, so FIFA sourced about 600 rolls of Tahoma 31 bermudagrass from a contingency farm in Carolina and began laying it on Wednesday 6 May , with the mobile stitching machine that knits the surface together arriving the week of 12 May .
Biology, not logistics, sets the constraint. A laid pitch is not a playable one: the grass has to root into the soil beneath and knit into a single mat before it can take studs and slide tackles, and that process runs on growth time money cannot rush. The opener Brazil play at this venue on Saturday 13 June sets the deadline, and the rooting window between early May and that date is the margin the groundstaff are working inside.
The rig beneath the pitch exists to buy that time. The surface sits two feet above the original stadium floor over an irrigation and ventilation system, with temperature-controlled air pumped beneath the soil to force growth in a roofed bowl that natural sunlight cannot reach evenly. It is a hidden race the broadcast will never show, decided weeks before the first whistle.
