MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, had 600 rolls of Carolina Tahoma 31 bermudagrass installed in roughly 48 hours, targeting a playable surface for Saturday 13 June 1. That is the day Brazil play Morocco there, leaving the grounds team barely two days of settling time before a World Cup match is played on the new grass.
The surface arrived as a recovery job. MetLife sourced the Carolina turf after the New Jersey supply failed , trucking roughly 20 loads of grass grown over ten months from a farm outside Charlotte. The mobile stitching machine that arrived in mid-May had already prepared the base, knitting artificial fibres through the soil so the natural sward holds under tournament load.
The engineering underneath is what the eight-day margin is buying time for. The grass sits above two feet of sand, a full irrigation system and vacuum ventilation, a stack designed to drain, breathe and root fast enough to survive from the opener through to the final on 19 July. Lay it too early and it outgrows the cut; too late and the roots have not bound. Installing now, with settling time measured in hours rather than weeks, closes the host stadium's last surface question with the smallest workable cushion.
