The microbiome of grassland soils provides ecosystem services essential to plant health and productivity, including nutrient cycling and suppression of soil-borne diseases. Understanding how soil management practices affect soil microbial communities will provide opportunities by which indigenous soil microbes and their functions can be managed to sustain or promote plant growth and enhance disease suppressiveness. Here, we investigated the impact of 20 years of plant residue management in a long-term grassland field trial on soil chemical and (micro)biological properties, in particular the suppression of damping-off disease of kale caused by the fungal root pathogen Rhizoctonia solani AG 2–1. Plant residue management led to significant var...