It is not on a yard line, it is on the back line of the endzone, which is 10 yards deep.
The displacement would be 24 yards from the line of scrimmage. The distance traveled would be 56 yards.
I'm sure they would, but not unless the ball can be kicked accurately. For a place kicker, making a kick from 70 yards out is unheard of (I believe the NFL record is 63 yards). For a punter, if you can drill the ball 70 yards down the field, great, but you would also need to be able to accurately kick it a lesser distance depending on your teams position on the field.
As of the 2008 season, in the NFL that would be Eric Dickerson who rushed for 2,105 yards in 1984 for the Los Angeles Rams.
That would depend on when the ball was lateralled to the running back. If the ball was lateralled behind the line of scrimmage, the running back would be credited with all of the yards. But if the ball was lateralled past the line of scrimmage, the quarterback would be credited with the number of yards he had gained before lateralling and the running back would be credited with the rest. Example: Ball is at the offense's 30 yard line. Offense runs an option play. The quarterback gets to the 32 yard line and laterals to the running back who gets knocked out of bounds at the 45. The play gained 15 yards. Since the quarterback lateralled the ball at the 32, and the original line of scrimmage was the 30, the quarterback would be credited with 2 yards rushing and the running back would be credited with 13 yards rushing.
22 5/6 yards. That is one 18 1/2 crossbar, one 10 foot base and two 20 foot arms for a total of 68 1/2 feet or 22 5/6 yards. -mikayla-
23.7 yards
It would take someone with a better math background than me to answer that but I will give you a rough estimate. Using NFL rules as an example, the distance between the goal posts is 18 feet 6 inches. Therefore, the crossbar's length is 18 feet 6 inches. The distance between the ground and the top of each goal post, by NFL rule, must be a minimum of 30 feet. Using that 30 foot minimum as an example, each goal post would be 20 feet in length. The length in question is with the base. While the base is connected to the crossbar, it has a curve to it towards the top. This is so the base can be out of the field of play ... behind the end line of the end zone. We can say that the base is 10 feet in length, but if the curved portion were straightened out, I do not know what the length would be. When we add the length of the crossbar with the lengths of the two goal posts we come up with 58 feet 6 inches (18 feet 6 inches + 20 feet + 20 feet). Adding 10 feet for the base would make the minimum total length 68 feet 6 inches.
The answer would be 20 pieces. 10 25 yards long pieces would be 250 yards total. Divide that by 12 gets you 20.8333... Since you want whole pieces, you would round that down to 20. Kelli can cut 20 full pieces.
It is not on a yard line, it is on the back line of the endzone, which is 10 yards deep.
If the parts of an NFL goal post were placed end-to-end, they would stretch 68 feet 6 inches, which is about 22.833 yards.
72 20 yards = 720 inches so you get 144 pieces
9 pieces: 6 yards = 18 feet, then divide by 2 feet per piece to get 9 pieces.
2 and one quarter yards long
~29,167 square yards
4.5
47.5