Stress Fractures: Are Hard Play Surfaces At Fault?

In a previous article where Soccerscene spoke with a member of a localclub about playing pitches, they commented on stress fractures being an issue when their younger teams played on the hard fields every season. Though they were not quoted in the story, the thought of young athletes sustaining life-changing injuries due to preventable factors is quite serious.

Stress fractures (or hairline fractures) occur when the bone is being overused, leading to the body being unable to repair the hard tissue over a period of time, resulting in a break in the bone. For this to happen, a person would have to repeatedly perform the same action where the injury is located, which is more likely to be in the foot and ankle and shin bones.

Knowing now how stress fractures occur and what leads them to occur in the first place. Is it the pitches or something else?

The Pitches

Football pitches and outdoor sports grounds are usually regulated by the governing body and state government in Australia; however, bodies like FIFA have larger control over the sport in a larger area. This includes what type of pitch is used.

Artificial footballpitches (or synthetic turf pitches) are common in sports grounds due to their versatility. The pitch can be used year-round and is independent of the seasons and weather and is used in both professional and amateur league sports grounds. Most artificial pitches are made of plastic fibres sewn to rubber matting to help with shock absorption.

Installing artificial turf also means the grounds do not have to be maintained as much as if it were natural grass. However, in the Premier League, several instances and complaints about player conditions on artificial fields have resulted in player injuries due to their mobility.

Though FIFA has conducted several research and development projects to create the perfect artificial turf since 2015, and recent academic papers have proven players are less likely to be injured on artificial turf, sustaining injuries could be from changes in the types of training and playing surfaces athletes are used to.

In Australia, major sports grounds will have artificial turf installed, while outdoor areas will have natural grass, which is what most of the young-aged teams usually play on.

In the Sports Injury Survey 2024/25, 41 per cent of leg and ankle/foot injuries which resulted in hospitalisation were fractures; the second were soft-tissue injuries like muscle sprains. Boys aged 10 to 19 were more likely to be hospitalised by their injuries than girls aged the same.

The Other Factor(s) of Football Injuries

It is true the conditions of a soccer pitch, like all sports grounds, affect how a player will perform; it isn’t the only issue, according to Sam Turner, podiatrist and founder of ThatFootballPodiatrist, who has worked with athletes in the AFL and the A-League Men’s and Women’s.

He told Soccerscene there are many factors which go into why athletes develop injuries like stress fractures.

“What is the player’s history? Are they having the right nutrition? There are many factors,” he said to Soccerscene.

Sam believes simply blaming hard sports grounds for athletes sustaining injuries can be a bearing on the cause, but factors like how players recover from previous injuries, strength training, and the inappropriate size and condition of soccer boots are just as important.

“Is it the smoking gun? Probably not.”

At the start of September this year, Sam posted on Instagram an open letter to the Professional Football Association to aid the financial burden of soccer players who cannot afford to buy the recommended three to four pairs of boots to meet the physical demands of the A-League.

“The AFL collective bargaining agreement provides the player five pairs of shoes total, which can be things like boots and runners,” he said.

“When I go to Western United, especially to the women’s, they have no idea that it is possible for clubs to provide these entitlements.”

Though the club’s allowance for uniform and other expenses depends on sponsorships, some soccer player are paid as little as $40,000 annually after tax.

After paying for amenities and other expenses, given the choice of new boots costing hundreds of dollars or trying to extend the lifespan of boots that need replacing after training four times a week plus matches, players are more likely to choose the latter.

“Being comfortable can help players play better for 90 to 100 minutes of performance,” Sam said.

Besides having the correct and appropriate footwear, recovery and ‘listening to your body and acting on it’ may counteract the negative effects of exacerbating the injury, and in some serious cases, Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport, a syndrome found more in women athletes than men.

However, hard surfaces have proven time and time again to be detrimental to the health of players across all sports, and this needs to be considered by leagues around the country.

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More Than One in Five Football Australia Staff to Lose Jobs Amid Growing Financial Losses

Australian football finds itself in a curious position.

From the outside, the game appears to be riding a wave of momentum. Attendances, visibility and public interest have all experienced significant uplift in recent years, while major international tournaments and growing discussion around football’s future continue to place the sport firmly within the national conversation.

Yet behind that momentum, Football Australia is now confronting a far more challenging internal reality.

 

A compounding deficit

Chief Executive Martin Kugeler has reportedly indicated the governing body’s projected financial losses for 2025 are expected to exceed the organisation’s reported $8.5 million deficit from the previous year. Accompanying the financial outlook are substantial organisational changes, with reporting from Tracey Holmes indicating more than one in five Football Australia employees are expected to lose their positions through restructuring measures.

The figures represent more than a difficult balance sheet. They point toward a significant period of recalibration inside the organisation responsible for overseeing the sport nationally.

 

Losing the wisdom of existing staff members

For governing bodies, restructures are often framed as strategic necessities for future sustainability. However, workforce changes on this scale also raise broader questions around the challenges of such a transition.

People are often the carriers of knowledge, relationships and long-term strategic understanding. When organisations undergo significant structural change, the effects can extend beyond immediate financial outcomes.

 

Contradicting timing

The timing is what makes the developments particularly notable.

Football in Australia has spent recent years discussing expansion, growth and long-term opportunity. The conversation surrounding the game has increasingly centred on future potential. Often headlining stronger pathways, larger audiences, infrastructure development and greater visibility.

Against that backdrop, news of deep financial losses and substantial staffing reductions creates a different conversation: one focused not on where the game wants to go, but on what may be required to sustain that journey. Therefore, this announcement points toward stagnancy, rather than growth.

Further detail surrounding Football Australia’s strategy and long-term direction will likely emerge over coming months. For now, the developments serve as a reminder that growth stories are rarely straightforward.

Often, the periods that appear strongest from the outside can also be the moments organisations face their most significant internal tests.

Heidelberg United denied qualification to AFC UCL 2

In an announcement made yesterday, Football Australia revealed that, in place of Heidelberg United, Melbourne Victory will now take the AFC UCL 2 spot.

A premature ending

In what is sure to be a disappointing verdict for Heidelberg’s fans, staff and supporters, the NPL VIC side will no longer compete in next season’s AFC CL 2.

The decision comes despite Heidelberg meeting the necessary criteria outlined in Football Australia’s National Club Licensing Regulations.

“We understand that this will be a disappointing outcome for everyone connected to Heidelberg United FC,” said FA Executive Director of Football, Heather Garriock, via press release.

“The club earned enormous respect through its performances this season and should be proud of what it achieved both on and off the pitch.”

Indeed, through defeating several A-League outfits en-route to the Australia Cup Final against Newcastle Jets, Heidelberg did earn widespread respect and admiration across the landscape. Football Australia also strongly advocated for the side’s place in the AFC CL 2 following Newcastle’s qualification to the AFC CL Elite.

But despite the determined efforts of the club’s board to meet all necessary criteria, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) ruled the side ineligible to compete.

 

Victory emerge as replacements

Filling the now-vacant position in next season’s competition is Melbourne Victory, who finished 4th in the A-League this year.

As 3rd-place Auckland FC are based in New Zealand, thus falling under the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), they are also ineligible to compete.

So while the AFC CL 2 will still be arriving in Melbourne next season, fixtures will no longer be built on the underdog success story of Heidelberg’s immense rise from NPL to AFC CL matchdays.

The club, however, will appeal the decision, and has written to Football Australia for further clarity on the Appeals Process.

It remains uncertain whether the appeal will be successful or not, but Heidelberg will undoubtedly enjoy the backing not just of its own staff and supporters, but of the entire Australian grassroots community.

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