PLAYING ON A HORRIBLE FOOTBALL PITCH!



In episode 5 of our documentary series with Unibet, we’re investigating sporting surfaces, and how they affect performance.

Does a bobbly, boggy, wet or dry pitch actually have a significant impact on your tekkers, and on the result of a match? And what are the cheeky tactics deployed by home teams when preparing their surfaces for the arrival of the visitors?

Elsewhere, we set up the ultimate game of two halves, and check out why different tennis surfaces suit different players like Nadal, Federer and Djokovic.

Along the way, we’re joined by a host of experts, including Jermaine Jenas, Glenn Hoddle, Brian Laudrup, Paul Robinson and Mark Warburton.

And to finish off, we will show you some Football X Tennis tekkers… As we set out to prove once again that #LuckIsNoCoincidence

Check out more from the series at http://www.Unibet.com/LuckIsNoCoincidence

Don’t forget to SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/2bbSA6h

Talk to us on TWITTER: https://twitter.com/f2freestylers
Insta – https://www.instagram.com/thef2/
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/TheF2Freestylers
Snapchat – F2Freestylers

source

49 thoughts on “PLAYING ON A HORRIBLE FOOTBALL PITCH!”

  1. My school's pitch has a hole a foot deep in the middle the school tried to fill it but now you cant even see the hole and you just fall over. When it rains the pitch gets so muddy you cant play.

  2. Alright lads. I know it's a football channel and all. But when you do get your toes dipped into different sports get the stuff right. The "hardcourt" that is being spoken about in tennis is not the surface displayed, it's cushion court. The surface pictured as clay is actually smash court (artificial clay). I know there's not many real clay courts in England but there sure are enough proper hard courts. I would really like to see those same stats on the actual surfaces.

Comments are closed.

Scroll to Top