海角大神

Baseball鈥檚 magical 90 feet and other great sports measurements and dimensions

2. Football鈥檚 100-yard field

SHARON ELLMAN/AP/FILE
n this Oct. 23, 2011, file photo, fans cheer as the St. Louis Rams and Dallas Cowboys play in an NFL football game at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The field鈥檚 length seems so logical today that it鈥檚 hard to imagine it was ever any different, but it was. In its early days, when the game resembled rugby, the field size 鈥 as in rugby up this day 鈥 varies somewhat. It wasn鈥檛 until 1881, according to ESPN, that the field鈥檚 length was standardized at 110 yards, which is roughly equivalent to 100 meters, and may have been influenced by rugby and a couple of games Harvard played against Montreal鈥檚 McGill University.

By 1912, the rule makers decided to add 10-yard-deep end zones to either end of the field, which would have made for a 130-yard-long field in toto. The problem was a number of colleges had built stadiums that wouldn鈥檛 accommodate that length, so the distance between the goal lines was shortened to 100 yards. The modern Canadian field is 110 yards goal line to goal line, probably a carryover from football鈥檚 early metric/rugby influence.

Standardizing the American field at 100 yards is ideal for several reasons. One is simply that 100 is a magical number. Second, it makes for easy sectioning into 10-yard increments that provide teams and spectators a quick reference for gauging progress up and down the field. And, of course, 10-yard thinking is woven into football鈥檚 mindset because that is the distance that must be gained for a first down.

2 of 10
You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.