There are 3 feet in one yard. 200 feet/3 = 67 yards;
since yards go up to 50 thatt would be at your 50-17 = 43 yard line
One football field is 300 yards from goal line to goal line. 1 yard = 3 feet. If you are wanting to know how many feet are from goal line to goal line, it would be 300 feet. The end-zones are another 10 yards each. This adds another 60 total feet. If you are asking from goal post to goal post it would be 360 feet.
There is no 50 yard line on a soccer field. That would be the pointy football next door you're looking for. But, as a pure math problem, there are always 150 feet in 50 yards.
You can 'see' approximately 200 feet if you are at a football game (American football, not soccer that is). So a football field from goal line to goal line is 100 yard, or 300 feet. So subtract 100 feet (33 1/3 yards) from that and you have 200 feet. So if you look at the 33 yard line, then look to the other goal line, that will be 67 yards which is 201 feet - pretty close.
8000 square feet would make a fenced in area of about 90 feet by 90 feet and I haven't thought of anything that size. 90 feet is the distance to the 30 yard line on a football field.
The field is 360 feet long and 160 feet wide. The end zones are 30 feet deep. The line used in PAT plays is two yards out from the goal line.
A College Football field is 100 yards long, like an NFL field. There aren't many differences between College Football and NFL, except things like they have to be in College, so they can only play for four years, and the fact that only one foot has to be in for a catch to be complete.
If you take 3 football fields, that's 900 feet (from one goal line to the other). An 885-foot ship is just a bit short of that by 15 feet.
300 ft. 1 yard = 3 feet. => 100 yards = 300 feet. However, if you account for the 10-yard endzones at either end, then the football field is actually 360 feet or 120 yards.
A catch in PRO football requires 2 feet in the end zone. A catch In college requires 1 foot in the end zone. The ball breaking the plane of the goal line on a run, or catch and run in the field of play.
It depends entirely on the size of the field !
A football field, within the "in-bounds" area of the field, is 0.9 acres -- starting at the goal line and ending at the 10 yard line on the other end of the field. When you include the full length of the field plus the end zones, a football field is 1.32 acres.A high school football field measures 360 feet long by 160 feet wide (playing area). This equals 57,600 square feet which translates to 1.32231 acres.
The whole court is 92 feet so the half court line would be 45.5 feet.