Football field - All factors at a glance
Football pitches all have different sizes. When it comes to the dimensions of a football pitch, there are clear rules that amateur and professional clubs must adhere to. In this article, we look at the question of how big a football pitch can be.
Football field size
For international football matches, FIFA specifies standard sizes. However, the world governing body also allows the clubs a certain amount of leeway in the size of the football pitch. The international dimensions of a football pitch are 100 to 105 metres in length and 64 to 68 metres in width. Due to the international guidelines, a standard size of 105 metres by 68 metres has been established in Germany and also in Europe. By way of comparison, this is the size of nine handball courts or 28 tennis courts. In the Bundesliga, most clubs play on an international standard pitch size. Especially clubs that regularly hold international matches play on a football field 105 metres long and 68 metres wide. There are also clear regulations from the association side for World and European Championships: The football fields must be between 100 and 110 metres long and between 64 and 75 metres wide for the popular tournament competitions.
Football field lines and markings
The most important playing areas on a football pitch are marked with white lines. They serve to demarcate the playing field and help the referees make the right decisions. For example, the so-called "sixteenth" is marked on the football field because a foul play within this field results in a penalty kick. If the ball leaves the marked sidelines, the other team is awarded a throw-in. If the ball leaves the field of play behind the marked goal line, the referee decides on a corner kick or a goal kick - depending on which team touches the ball last. All lines on the football field must have the same width. The maximum width of the lines is 12 cm. The following markings are to be found on the football field:
- two sidelines
- two goal lines
- two goal area markings
- two penalty markings
- two semicircles at the penalty area
- two penalty markings or penalty points
- a kick-off circle
- a centre line
- a centre point or point of impact
- four corner quarter circles or corner ball markings
Outer line and goal line
Centre line
Penalty area
Goal area
The penalty spot
The corner quarter circles
The history of the football pitch
It is not only tactics and technique that have changed in football over the past decades, but also the markings and dimensions of the football pitch. The game of football did not adopt uniform regulations until the middle of the 19th century when "The Football Association" (FA) was founded in England in 1863. Before football developed into a popular and recognised team sport, "kicking" was a rough competition between two villages. Two goals were marked on any given area to compete against each other. The size of the "football field" did not matter. At the beginning of the 19th century, some English universities and public schools established football in the classroom - however, almost all educational institutions had their own rules of the game, so that inter-regional football matches could not be implemented. Only after the founding of the FA was there a uniform set of rules. Among other things, the FA stipulated that a football pitch could have a maximum of 200 by 100 yards (182.88 by 91.44 metres).