There are a 120 yards, including end zones, in a football field. There are 360 feet in 120 yards, and 5280 feet is a mile, then there is .06 miles in a football field
Updated edit: I believe they were asking about the circumference, you are talking about the diameter. 4 laps around a football track = just about 1 mile.
Diameter, however, is not .06 miles - it is rounded incorrectly. The number is 0.0684.... It is actually 0.07 miles in one end to the other a football field, not the track around it. The number looks small, but look at it this way: .07, then .14 (after two) .21 (after three)... the number rises fairly quickly....
Yeah, I know, it's only off by one-hundredth - oh well, just trying to give a good answer! :)
A football field is about 1/17 of a mile.
17.6 football fields
1 mile = 17.6 American football fields.
484 Total football fields.
A standard football field measures 360 feet by 160 feet. There are 27,878,400 feet in a square mile. This means that you could fit a total of 484 standard football fields in a square mile.
If a football fiels is 100 yards (300 ft) and a mile is 5280 ft then a mile is 17.6 football fields.
There is 5280 feet in a mile X 1.5 = 7920 feet divided by 300 feet in a football field minus end zones = 26.4 football fields in 1.5 miles.
One American football field is 0.05681 mile.
Not counting the endzones it is 1760 (yards in a mile) x 9 miles / 100 = 158.4 football fields. If you count the endzones you are adding 20 yards to the end of the 100 making it 132 fields.
The answer is 17.6 football fields using 5280 ft(1 mi.) divided by 300. Of course this number will be a bit less if you accounted for the size of the endzones at each end of the field. If you account for the endzones, the answer is 14.666 football fields. Using the same 5280 ft in a mile divided by 360 ft. The endzones are 10 yds(30ft) each.
An NFL field is 100 yards long, which is 300 feet, so half of that is 150 feet.
96.78 football fields.
528 American football fields.
3 football fields