Interestingly having heard this point about time taken to pitch, at Easter we followed another seasoned caravanned onto site. The road was clear. One side opposite the pitches was roped off to protect the grass. The one in front reversed onto the pitch, getting in a right state due to the acute angle and roped off area not facilitating a clean one off movement.
I pulled onto the pitch, a hardstanding, unhitched, put the mover on and was on the peg with steadies down, EHU plugged in, water connected before the reverser was on the peg.
At the next site, I pulled onto the pitch, used the mover to pitch. Had I used the car, a rear drive diesel, auto, I'd have churned the pitch up, just like all the reversers did over the time we were there. We used the mover to de pitch with no marks in the grass. Others required tractors to drag them off, and probably made pitches a quagmire for the coming season.
In our short ownership of a large 7.5mt / 24'6' single axle caravan on wet grass pitches have tended to use the mover rather than churn the pitch up just to demonstrate I can reverse. I think preserving the pitch is more important tbh.
Using the mover makes life so much easier, and I'm blowed if I'm going to shove and pull the caravan at my age. I can position the wheel for the wheel lock first time, too.