THE esteemed All England Lawn Tennis Club (AKA Wimbledon's organisers) has come 16,500 kilometres to regional Australia to test grass.
STRI Group sports turf consultant Carlos Sartoretto, who runs trials at the Redlands Research Station, said it was weather at Cleveland, east of Brisbane, that made it the best place to study warm season grasses.
"The trial here is to find out which grass could provide the best lawn grass for tennis in other parts of the world," Mr Sartoretto said.
The year-round trials are for the All England Lawn Tennis Club which runs the Wimbledon championships - now the only Grand Slam played on grass - to promote lawn tennis around the world.
STRI researchers like Mr Sartoretto and manager Mark Ferguson also provide hands-on advice and support throughout Wimbledon, working closely with Wimbledon's head of courts and horticulture Neil Stubley.
"There are 18 courts played on during the tournament and about the same number of practice courts," Mr Sartoretto said.
"Grass is a living organism which means it grows differently in different places depending on factors like the wind and shade.
"We need to make sure that each court plays the same regardless of where it is.
"Data obtained by the grass scientists who look at factors like surface hardness, soil moisture content, turf quantity and vigor were used to make decisions every day during the tournament."
Mr Sartoretto said the soil content in the Redlands was similar to that at Wimbledon, although the colour was different.
About 60 grasses, planted on nearly 250 plots are currently being tested at the Delancey Street research station.
STRI has operated in the United Kingdom for about 90 years. The company worked with FIFA during the soccer World Cups in South Africa in 2010, Brazil four years later and Russia last year, and also on events like the 2016 Olympic Games and the British Open.
Scientific research into grasses has become more important in an effort to deliver pitches that have the same conditions, even in different stadiums, and look good on high-definition televisions.
"The surfaces need to be the same in all stadiums," Mr Sartoretto said. "Where players train and where they play, the conditions need to be the same."