“Bluegrass doesn’t like the heat,” Mike Boekholder, the Phillies’ head groundskeeper, told the Daily News in 2012. “But with Bermuda grass, the hotter and nastier it gets outside, the more it’s growing to beat the band — a much thicker, smoother canopy.”
Phillies Bring Back Kentucky Bluegrass to Infield
The Phillies are bringing Kentucky bluegrass back to their infield — the same type of turf they played on during the earliest years of Citizens Bank Park, including the 2008 World (Bleeping) Series championship.
The club had replaced the turf with Bermuda grass before the 2012 season, since Bermuda can take the punishment of hot summers and 80-plus games a little better. But players didn’t like it much.
The Wall Street Journal this week named the Phillies’ turf switch one of the changes to look for across the league this 2016 season:
The Phillies won a World Series in 2008 playing on a home turf of Kentucky bluegrass. In 2012, they switched to a hardy breed called Bermuda, in part to handle the foot-traffic of revenue-generating concerts on non-game days. Bermuda is best when cut very short, and ground balls have been zipping toward infielders like Titleists on fast fairways. They’ll resod with Kentucky blue this season. It can be cut a little longer, slowing down grounders. It’s good news for pitchers, if they can keep batted balls on the ground. Last year the “ground out to air out” ratio for Phillies pitchers was fifth worst in the league, according to BaseballReference.com. Easier-to-field bouncers might help.