Biggest football pitch size in the world and Europe. ?
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2012-04-20 12:25:31 UTC
Can anybody tell me the biggest pitch in the world. NOT STADIUM, PITCH SIZE. Is it the nou camp pitch cos when I watch barca play that pitch is MASSIVE. How big is the bernabeu pitch compared to barcas and other top european teams.
The biggest football pitch size in Europe(I don t know if it s biggest pitch size in the whole world) is the Rajko Mitic stadium from Red Star Belgrade, Serbia. Its measurement is 110mX73m. It is the biggest pitch in Europe, and maybe the biggest in the World.
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2012-04-22 06:48:54 UTC
Santiago Bernebeu's the biggest.
Arnaldo S
2014-02-09 14:43:28 UTC
Dick's Sporting Good's Park in Colorado is 120 yards by 80 yards (109.7m X 73.2m )
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2016-03-13 10:01:21 UTC
>>They said on the news it will pass over 20,000 miles away which is quite safe. Er thats pretty close if you ask me seeing as some of our satellites orbit further away.<< 20,000 miles is still 20,000 miles. Yes, it's closer than our geostationary satellites, but it's still so far away you won't even be able to see the thing without optical aid. >>And a football pitch size seems pretty darn big. << One minute you're saying 20,000 miles is a short distance, next you're saying a football pitch is big. Why is one set of measurements treated differently to another? You seem to just be trying to make it more scary than it needs to be. >>Anyway which direction should you look in to see it and why is it being downplayed?<< It is not being 'downplayed'. The reports are funny things called 'facts'. We scientists like to use them, but when they are not exciting enough people complain we're downplaying something. >>Could it not change trajectory and slam into earth?<< Lumps of rock flying through space don't randomly change course. >>What about a solar flare could that change the trajectory?<< No. For one thing a solar flare doesn't have the propulsive force to effect a huge course change on a lump of rock moving at thousands of miles per hour. For another, the rock is on the night side of Earth. How would a flare from the Sun pull an asteroid on the opposite side of the Earth towards it? >>My point is this is a big bit of rock passing very close and there isn't even a good documentary or bbc special on it.<< It's not big as pieces of space rock go. Why make a huge fuss about it? It's on the news. Isn't that enough for you? >>Jason T thanks for the condescending answer.<< You're welcome. >>Lets look at some more facts: Fact1 Its the biggest known rock to pass close to the earth in living memory since the 1908 collision.<< Nope. The Russian meteor today was the largest impact since 1908. Several much larger rocks have passed close to Earth in the past century. DA 14 happens to be the closest. >>Fact2 a lump of rock exploded over the heads of people in Russia yesterday injury 500 hundred people and this wasn't predicted by scientists.<< Yes, I know. That was because that lump of rock was even smaller and came from the sunward side of Earth. Scientists are not prescient. We just don't have the ability to detect pieces of rock that small before they hit us yet. DA14 was discovered last year and observed extensively. We do know a LOT about that one. >>Fact3 these types of events have only become possible to know about in the last few decades as before hand it would just float by without detection.<< This is not in dispute. >>So you understand its quite a big deal and to the general public its quite interesting.<< Yes, and that's why it is on the news and all over the internet all over the world. Just because the BBC haven't made a special on it doesn't mean the information is not being broadcast to everyone who wants it. Unfortunately, even with all this information, we still get members of the public saying it's going to hit us or asking if it could unexdpectedly change course or other absurd things like that. The information is there and available. Look it up. >>Jason well done for not being condescending this time and concurring with what I said. It wasn't so hard was it?<< Not when what you say is actually sensible, no. Simultaneously saying 22,000 miles is a small distance and a football pitch is a large size is ridiculous, as is your suggestion that it was somehow being 'downplayed'. It was literally ALL OVER the media.
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