The Motz Group is a full service athletic field design, consulting and construction company. We specialize in synthetic and natural turf systems for professional, collegiate and high school sports teams in addition to other recreational outlets. Welcome to our blog...we hope you find it interesting and informative!

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Mansfield High School - Ready to Play Football!

Mansfield Senior High School is ready to play some football on their brand new synthetic turf field installed by The Motz Group of Cincinnati.  Motz has just completed the 24/7® synthetic turf system that is infilled with recycled crumb rubber and sand.
photo credit: mansfieldnewsjournal.com

The Tygers will play host to The Galion Tigers in the season-opener at 7 p.m. on Friday August 26.  

Zach Burns, VP and Sales and Marketing Director for The Motz Group, will attend the field dedication on Friday prior to kick off.  "We are excited for the Tygers to get to play on their new synthetic turf system. We wish them a lot of luck in the upcoming season."

According to Highschoolsports.net the Tygers are picked to beat the Tigers.  75% of fans picked Mansfield Tygers while 25% have picked the Galion Tigers. The prediction, Tigers 13 - Tygers 28. 

There is one prediction that will ring true. The new turf at Arlin field will perform beautifully. 
24/7  is manufactured with premium slit film yard and provides all-weather toughness that stands up to repeated poundings.  
As Larry Gibbs, a spokesperson for Mansfield City Schools, quoted in  a recent mansfieldnewsjournal.com article "The company's web site - 
www.themotzgroup.com - includes photos of synthetic turf installations at more than 30 other Ohio high schools, Thomas More College, Hanover College and on a regulation-size indoor football field at the Miami Dolphins' training facility.  
To see some logo installation images click
HERE 

For more information on 24/7 turf or other proven synthetic turf systems, contact Zach Burns at 513.533.6452 or info@themotzgroup.com


Good luck Tygers!

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Artificial turf spreads fields of plastic green


Franklin County schools say it’s cheaper in the long run and allows for more use


Anthony Meyer of The Motz Group pulls turf into place at Thomas Worthington 
Original article can be found here.

Manicured, sweet-smelling grass might appear environmentally superior to the plastic blades and rubber pellets of artificial turf.
But schools are increasingly looking beyond nature’s field of dreams toward one that can endure rain-soaked football games and weeks of punishing heat and drought — all without water or fertilizer — while producing thousands of dollars in additional revenue.
Almost all school districts in Franklin County have at least one playing field made of artificial turf.
Thomas Worthington High School finished unrolling its first carpet of green last week. Bexley High School, the first central Ohio school to install the fake turf 10 years ago, will become the first to replace its field, by the end of October. And Westerville schools plan to complete installations at South and North high schools by the start of this football season.
The long-term benefits can outweigh the initial costs, school officials said. After Westerville Central High School’s field was carpeted last year, many more community organizations and youth athletic groups wanted to use it, bringing in more revenue, said Greg Viebranz, school spokesman.
In Bexley, “I think it’s one of the single-best improvements the district has ever made,” said Chris Essman, the school district’s treasurer, citing the “24/7” usability and lack of maintenance.
The installation cost can range from about $600,000 to more than $1 million, said Henry Zaborniak, an assistant commissioner of the Ohio High School Athletic Association. The fields last 10 to 15 years, but replacements are cheaper than the original installation because schools don’t have to rebuild the foundation and water-drainage system.
Maintaining a grass field, including mowing and watering, can cost as much as $25,000 a year, which is cheaper over a decade than putting in artificial turf, but grass limits the number of times a field can be used.
Westerville and some other districts used bonds and property taxes to pay for the artificial turf, but other schools rely almost entirely on private donations.
The $660,000 cost of Bexley’s first field was covered by private donations. Its replacement, at $316,000, will be paid for with rental revenue from the cellphone towers that were installed 10 years ago at its high-school stadium, Essman said.
Thomas Worthington’s new turf has been financed through fund drives, corporate and private donations and a brick-paver fundraiser. The largest individual contribution was more than $200,000.
However, raising money can be hurt by the perception that the costly fields are a luxury, said David Mordoh, the president of TWHS Cards Inc., Thomas Worthington’s sports boosters group.
“I think schools eventually will look at it and say this is a necessity. We can’t have the foot traffic without the artificial turf,” Mordoh said. “I think the common citizen doesn’t realize how much activity is going on on those fields.”
The benefits to athletes are subjective. Modern artificial fields are “spongier and more natural, like players like it,” Zaborniak said. But they’re also much hotter on warm days.
Chris Tilton, a former Worthington lacrosse player, has used both. He now is a consultant for capital-projects spending in Worthington.
“I just wish I’d seen it in 10 years ago. It’s a very fast-paced surface for lacrosse and soccer,” Tilton said.