Having played on both, you are just as likely to get friction burns on either, but 3G indoor rubber crumb pitches are much less likely to cause or aggravate impact based injuries such as shin splints, so I have a preference for those over the traditional wood flooring.
Emily -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: 06 October 2009 23:22 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [BD] Indoor Ultimate Surfaces > If you have no opinion but would like to see the results please select > the third option. > > I will email the results in a months time. > > -Chef I have no real opinion having never played on crumb, so I selected option 3. I do have a question though. Is crumb really that much better (currently 18 votes to 12) or are the results just skewed by the saddo's {myself included} who are still up and checking e-mail at this time of night!) Seriously, what's the deal with crumb. Do people think that it gives a more 'grassy' feel and so can kid themselves that they are still outdoors, just on a smaller pitch? For me the two games are completely different. Being a slow old git (TM) I find that indoors can be more about position and turning ability than outdoors. After all, it's a lot more difficult to turn it into a straight foot race when you know you have to decelerate in 15-20 feet or run into a wall! Santa Devon 96 (outdoors) Second Wind Solar (indoors-ish) __________________________________________________ BritDisc mailing list [email protected] http://www.fysh.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/britdisc Staying informed - http://www.ukultimate.com/staying-informed __________________________________________________ BritDisc mailing list [email protected] http://www.fysh.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/britdisc Staying informed - http://www.ukultimate.com/staying-informed
