A mile is 1,760 yards long and a football field is 100 yards long. Therefore if you fit them end to end, you can fit 17.6 fields inside. However, if you fit them side by side you can do the same arithmetic using the width of the field, which I don't happen to know offhand. 18
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∙ 16y agoWiki User
∙ 15y agoA football field is 120 yards in length .... 100 yards of playing field and two 10 yard end zones. A mile is 1760 yards in length.
So (1760/120) = 14.66666666666666
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∙ 13y ago1/2 mile = 880 yards = 2,640 feet.
The official NFL football field is 120 yards long and 160 feet wide.
1/2 mile = (880/120) = 7-1/3 lengths of the field.
1/2 mile = (2,640/160) = 16-1/2 widths of the field
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∙ 13y agoAssuming the 3.1 miles is length and is at least 53 yards wide, you can fit 45 100 yard fields each with 2 10 yard end zones. There would be almost no room between each field.
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∙ 13y agoThere would be 68,181.8182 fields in one million miles.
120 (the number of yards in a football field) yards = 0.0681818182 miles
0.0681818182 x 1,000,000 = 68,181.8182
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∙ 12y ago4 times around the football track equals a mile.
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∙ 10y ago35.2 American football fields.
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∙ 11y ago4 times
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∙ 11y ago9
16 times around a football field is the same as 4 miles.
The tracks around a football field are typically designed to be a quartermile track, meaning 4 times around gives you a mile. If you walk around the outside edge of a standard US Football field, (120 yards by 53 1/3 yards wide) it is just over 5 times around to equal 1760 yards, or one mile.
one mile = 1760 yards,1/4 mile = 440 yardsMost modern track and field distances are now measured in meters, 100, 200, 400.....Back in the day they were measured in yards, 100, 220, 440, 880.....