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Glossary of English-language idioms derived from baseball

This is an alphabetical list of common English-language idioms based on baseball, excluding the extended metaphor referring to sex, and including illustrative examples for each entry. Particularly American English has been enriched by expressions derived from the game of baseball.

See also the Glossary of baseball terms for the jargon of the game itself, as used by participants, fans, reporters, announcers, and analysts of the game.

B

ballpark

Ballpark, in the ballpark, ballpark figure, and out of the ballpark — "Ballpark" has been used to mean a broad area of approximation or similarity, or a range within which comparison is possible; this usage the Oxford English Dictionary dates to 1960. Another meaning, "sphere of activity or influence", is cited in 1963. "In the (right) ballpark", meaning "within reasonable bounds" dates to 1968. A "ballpark figure" or "ballpark estimate", one that is reasonably accurate, dates to at least 1957.[1] The meaning of "out of the ball park" is to hit a home run; its non-baseball equivalent is to do something well or exactly as it should be done.[2]

"'They said Itanium would never be their fastest 32-bit processor, but it would be in the ballpark. The original x86 hardware execution mechanism was not in the ballpark. It was barely in the parking lot around the ballpark,' Brookwood said.' – Stephen Shankland The New York Times, 23 April 2003.[3]

"Patrick Wiles, a vice president of First Pioneer Farm Credit in Riverhead, said the 'ballpark figure' for prime vineyard land on the North Fork is $50,000 to $60,000 an acre, 'assuming the development rights have been sold.'" – Howard G. Goldberg, The New York Times, 18 July 2004.[4]

MSNBC said Hillary knocked it "out of the park". –New American Media, 27 August 2008.[5]

batting 1000

Also batting a thousand. Getting everything in a series of items right. In baseball, someone with a batting average of one thousand (written as 1.000) has had a hit for every at bat in the relevant time period (e.g., in a game). AHDI dates its non-baseball usage to the 1920s.[6] May also be used sarcastically when someone is getting everything wrong.

"'But Boston Scientific also needs to hope that a rare event does not become magnified,' he said. 'It has to be pretty much batting a thousand for a time,' he said". — Reed Abelson, The New York Times, 27 July 2004.[7]

beanball or throw a beanball

To attack an opponent by aiming at their head. In baseball, a beanball is a pitch intentionally thrown at a batter's head. In politics, it can be a verbal assault or a policy that is targeted to seriously hurt a particular opponent or group.

headline: "Senator Jim Bunning Throws Beanball at America's Unemployed" – Mason Lerner, The Faster Times, 26 February 2010.[8]

[Note: Then-Sen. Bunning had an established career as a Major League Baseball pitcher prior to running for public office.]

"But Brown and Whitman didn't swing at the questions, instead choosing to stick to a game of political beanball — trading jabs on Whitman's housekeeper, a Brown aide's "whore" remark and even verbal miscues. – Steven Luo, California Beat, 13 October 2010.[9]

big hitter(s)

At the highest level; used as a noun ("He is a big hitter").

big league(s)

At the highest level; used as a noun ("You're in the big leagues now") or an adjective ("big-league lawyer"). OED cites "big league" as specifically American Major League Baseball, and cites its first use in 1899; the non-baseball use appears in 1947.[10] Synonym: major league. Contrast bush league, below.

"For a listener who last heard the New Haven Symphony in the mid-60's, in a game but scrappy performance of Britten's War Requiem, its concert on Friday evening was a happy surprise. Under its music director, Michael Palmer, it sounded for the most part like a big-league band, at home in a big-league setting". — James Oestreich, The New York Times, 25 January 1994.[11]

brand new ballgame

In baseball, when a team that has been behind in runs ties up the game, it is sometimes said to be a brand new ballgame. This does not mean that the game starts over from the first inning; it only means that neither team is ahead, and the game continues. In other realms, the term is used to connote a change in tactics or who is ahead in a competition.

"It's a Brand New Ballgame for Outsourcing Real Estate" — John C. Maher, National Real Estate Investor, 1 July 2005.[12]

"Brand new ball game: New peanut program brings change" — Paul L. Hollis, Southwest Farm Press, 21 March 2002.[13]

brush back

To subvert or threaten verbally. In baseball, a nickname for any pitch intended to establish a pitcher's command of the inside portion of the strike zone, usually involving throwing a pitch at or near a hitter who may be covering that portion of the strike zone. Its baseball usage is cited in many dictionaries,[14] but its transition to the vernacular has yet to be dated.

"The Washington Times' George Archibald reports that Gerald A. Reynolds, assistant secretary for civil rights in the Department of Education, has sent a long overdue brush-back letter to college and university officials concerning their odious and oppressive campus speech codes". — David Limbaugh,The Washington Times, August 19, 2003.[15]

"One spokeswoman, Andrea Saul, has been throwing brushback pitches at reporters who write about Romney's faith, asking if they would write similar stories about Jews". – Jeffrey Goldberg, Bloomberg News, June 18, 2012.[16]

bush-league

Amateur, unsophisticated, unprofessional. From the baseball term for a second-rate baseball league and therefore its players (as in bush-league pitcher etc.). OED cites its first baseball use as 1906 (although there are uses as early as 1896),[17] non-baseball in 1914.[18] Contrast big league, above.

"Kinsley, who does come off as the stereotypical Los Angeles-hating East Coast wonk, said recently that because L.A. is the second biggest city in the country, 'it's really bush league to care about where the writers are from.'"— Catherine Seipp, National Review, March 24, 2005.[19]

C

Charley horse

Sudden stiffness or a cramp in the leg. Of unknown etymology; CDS cites its first use c. 1887 as baseball slang; OED states such cramps occur "especially in baseball players" and cites this usage to 1888.[20]

"Tried on more than 1,400 patients for almost two years, it has proved effective for many kinds of pain in the muscles and around joints — charley horse, tennis elbow, stiff neck, torticollis ('wryneck'), whiplash injury, muscular rheumatism, and muscle pain resulting from slipped disks". — Time, 8 June 1959[21]

cleanup hitter

Someone who comes in to solve a problem or lead a team. In baseball a cleanup hitter is the fourth man in the batting order, typically a slugger who is expected to clear the bases by driving other runners home to score runs. The OED first attributes "cleanup hitter" or "cleanup man" in its modern baseball usage to 1922.[22]

Under the headline "Merrill's cleanup hitter: new position focuses on quality of research," it is stated that "at Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., the "buy," "sell" and "hold" buck stops with William J. Genco".[23]

Under the headline "Trimeris Gets a Cleanup Hitter," it is stated that "Yesterday, tiny drug developer Trimeris (Nasdaq: TRMS) announced that it finally found a permanent CEO to help get itself in order following the resignation of its former leader a year ago.[24]

Referring to President George W. Bush: "There is a reason he is the current president and it is not just because of his Daddy or money — I think he makes a pretty solid cleanup hitter for the Republican Party and brought home the points made during the previous 4 days of the convention".[25]

closer

In baseball, a closing pitcher brought in to finish the game. In business, the person brought in to close the deal, get things done.[26]

cover one's bases

Also cover all the bases. To ensure safety. In baseball, a defensive player covers a base by standing close to it, ensuring a runner cannot reach it safely. In business, covering one's bases means being prepared for every contingency.[27] Mentioned but not dated by Oxford University Press.[28]

"Arson investigators sifted through the rubble of an Airdrie Stud barn today, but failed to determine the cause of a fire that killed 15 thoroughbred broodmares and yearlings Saturday night. The horses were worth more than $1 million, according to Brereton Jones, owner of the 3,000-acre (12 km2) stud farm. 'We do not have any reason to believe it was arson, but you just want to be sure you cover all the bases,' he said". — Associated Press, in The New York Times, 7 January 1985.[29]

"Cisco's FastHub 400 series has the bases covered".[30]

curve, curveball

As in "He really threw me a curveball". A surprise, often completely and totally unexpected, and usually unpleasant. The curveball is a pitch in baseball designed to fool the batter by curving unexpectedly. AHDI dates this usage to the mid-20th century.[31]

"Because of my personal story, I'm very interested in illness. One thing we discovered as a family is that when you're thrown a curveball like cancer or multiple sclerosis, often people do not know what to do first". – Meredith Vieira, quoted by Jeff Chu, Time, 27 August 2006.[32]

"Desormeaux chalked up the latest loss, his second so close to the Triple Crown, to another twist in a life so full of them. 'Life throws curves,' he said, 'Some of us hit it, and some of us will sulk around. We've continued to hit the curveball'". – The New York Times, 8 June 2008.[33]

D

double header

Two contests (or similar events) held on the same day with the same participants.

"The city's three mayoral candidates finished Wednesday's political double header with a debate at First Congregational United Church for Christ. ...The evening debate did not differ greatly from the luncheon forum that local Rotarians and Kiwanians hosted earlier in the day" — Andrew Edwards, Contra Costa Times, 21 October 2009[34]

down to the last out

To be near the end of a competition and have just one last chance to succeed. Also sometimes expressed as "down to the last strike."

"Hillary Clinton is now down to her last out".[35]

ducks on a pond

In baseball, having runners in scoring position, ready for a batter to drive them home. In business, "a situation with a good chance to succeed".[36]

E

extra innings

To extend the original time allotted in order to break a tie or settle an issue. In baseball, this means going beyond the standard nine-inning length of a game.

headline: "Extra Innings for the Cloned Food Debate" – Pallavi Gogoi, Bloomberg Businessweek, 2 April 2007[37]

headline: "Microsoft, Yahoo Game Going Into Extra Innings?" – Erika Morphy, E-Commerce Times, 5 June 2008[38]

F

first base

In baseball, a batter hopes to reach first base and then continue around second and third bases before reaching home and scoring a run. In interpersonal relations, an individual who cannot get to first base with another person is unable to achieve some initial goal or to establish a relationship. A kiss might be first base in a romantic relationship. (See Baseball metaphors for sex.) Getting an appointment with a potential customer might be first base in a business transaction or negotiation.

Under the headline, "Getting Past First Base," a writer asks: "How do you turn an initial contact with a prospect into a fully-fledged business relationship? It's the essence of sales – but it's an area where many people really struggle". — Ian Brodie, 8 November 2008.[39]

first inning or early innings

The early stages of a competition. A game of baseball typically lasts nine innings, so the first inning or the early innings (the first three innings) often do not determine the outcome. Also see "Ninth inning" (below).

headline: "Geithner: Tax reform debate in 'first inning'" — Bernie Becker, The Hill, 27 January 2011.[40]

headline: "Early Innings of a Banking Recovery" — Duncan Frearson, Smith Street Capital, July 13, 2010.[41]

foot in the bucket

To act in a timid or cowardly fashion. A batter who steps away from home plate with his leading foot (usually in fear of being struck by a pitched ball) instead of a straight-ahead stride is said to "step in the bucket".

"Even if you haven't stepped in the bucket yet, you may one day. So here are Be Better Guys' Tips for Handling a Screw Up at Work" – Be Better Guys: A Guy's Guide to Getting a Life, 17 June 2009.[42]

four-bagger

A complete success; compare home run, below. In baseball, "four-bagger" is another term for a home run, since the batter who hits a home run touches all four bags or bases, including home plate. A "four-bagger" in baseball may also mean any combination of hits and errors in one at-bat where the batter touches all four bases (a triple and an error, for example, a double and a two-base error, a single and a three-base error, or four-base error).

Referring to the prospects of a high-tech company, a headline reads, "Is Netflix a Four-Bagger in the Making"?[43]The Motley Fool, 6 October 2013.

G

grand slam

Any sudden, sweeping victory. A batter who hits a home run with bases loaded has hit a four-run "grand slam," a term originally borrowed from contract bridge for winning thirteen tricks. Aside from baseball, the term now refers to a situation which may or may not end badly for the protagonist but from which they emerge as an obvious winner. The term also can refer to anything good which comes in four parts, such as a "grand slam breakfast."

headline: "Natural Gas in Bear Market 'Grand Slam'" – Patti Domm, Market Insider, CNBC, 11 February 2011.[44]

headline: "Boeing Hits Grand Slam with Four DoD Deals" – John Adams, GovconWire, 7 September 2010.[45]

grandstanding

In baseball, a player who shows off or showboats to win the favor of the fans (in the grandstand) is said to be grandstanding. In other contexts, including politics, playing to the crowd, the audience, or the media might be described as grandstanding.

"Tellem weighed in with a thoughtful back-page article in this Sunday's New York Times regarding the recent Congressional and mainstream media grandstanding over steroids". — Jay Jaffe, Futility Infielder, 5 April 2005.[46]

headline: "Stop the grandstanding on the debt ceiling!" — CNN Money, 5 January 2011.[47]

"Opinions were varied and passionate, but there was no sniping, no partisan grandstanding." — Alex Williams, The New York Times, June 22, 2012.[48]

ground ball

A prosaic or ordinary accomplishment, beneath higher hopes or expectations. In baseball, a ground ball is a batted ball that bounces or rolls on the ground, perhaps for a base hit, perhaps for an out.

"Sony once hit home runs, but now it's lost its touch," said Akihiko Jojima, an analyst and author of the book Sony's Sickness. "Sony still makes competent products but they're all just boring ground balls." — Hiroko Tabuchi, New York Times, 28 March 2010.[49]

H

hardball, play hardball

To be or act tough or aggressive. Refers to the comparison between balls in baseball and softball. As a synonym for baseball, OED dates this use of "hardball" to 1883; its non-baseball use appears in 1973.[50]

"Hauser would like to extend its three-year contract with Bristol-Myers, becoming a supplier of the material for semi-synthetic Taxol. 'I think this is just tough bargaining,' said Deborah Wardwell of Dain Bosworth Securities. 'It seems to suggest hardball tactics.'" — Milt Freudenheim, The New York Times, 10 January 2007.[51]

heavy hitter

A powerful or commanding person, a leader. In baseball a heavy hitter is a slugger, someone who hits a lot of extra-base hits or home runs. In business, the heavy hitters may be those who draw the most clients or make the most sales, or who lead the organization. In politics a heavy hitter draws crowds or has a lot of power or influence.

headline: "Heavy-hitters line up for Hong Kong Tourism pitch".[52]

headline: "Boeing uses him as its heavy hitter. As it's done with other troubled programs, the company is relying on Patrick Shanahan to get the 787 back on track" — Los Angeles Times, 24 February 2008.[53]

headline: "UW Adds Heavy Hitters from High Tech and Biotech to Turn More Ideas Into Companies".[54]

hit it out of the park

Also knock it out of the park. To achieve complete or even a spectacular success; compare home run, below. A home run is automatically scored when a batter strikes the ball with such force as to hit it out of the stadium or playing field.

"11:55 AM: Kerry stumbled over the question of whether God is on America's side. But Edwards hit it out of the park with his anecdote about Abraham Lincoln saying America is on God's side. He is the more nimble debater and conversationalist". — Katherine Q. Seelye, The New York Times, 29 February 2004.[55]

hit or miss

To either achieve success or completely fail. In baseball, when a batter swings their bat at a pitched ball, they may either hit the ball or miss it.

headline: "Treating Depression Can Be Hit or Miss" – Los Angeles Times, 3 August 2009.[56]

"Hit or Miss? Kim Kardashian's T-Shirt Dress".[57]

hit singles

See "singles".

home run

A complete success (opposite of strike out); often used in the verb phrase "hit a home run". OED cites this usage to 1965.[58]

"HGTV caught on quickly, and is now carried in 90 million homes. The Food Network has been a home run as well, luring viewers interested in cooking". — Geraldine Fabrikant, The New York Times, 14 August 2006.[59]

"It was Silver's later, 15-month training period with the Apollo 15 astronauts, and that crew's brilliant geological performance on the lunar plain between the Apennine Mountains and Hadley Rille, a sinuous gorge, that, in Silver's words, "hit a home run."" — Marcy Drexler, Caltech News, 1999.[60]

I

inside baseball

Within the sport, "inside baseball" refers to the stratagems that managers use to get their team to score runs, perhaps not as obvious as simply getting players to hit home runs or to catch the ball, but to do the little things that move runners towards home plate. Akin to the idea of small ball. Outside the game, "inside baseball" may refer to the behind-the-scenes machinations of politicians, bankers, or other professionals.

under the headline "Dana Milbank's Inside Baseball," a news story begins: "With a few deft strokes and in fewer than 25 inches, Dana Milbank draws behind-the-scenes portraits of Washington power with such dexterity and hilarity that his Washington Sketch column is a must-read for anyone who wants to know how politics in this city really works". – Brigid Schulte, The Washington Post, 2 March 2010.[61]

"I once had to hire a writer to create my firm's brochure, because what I did was far too "inside baseball." Meaning, too focused on the details only an insider could love and not enough on what the audience wanted to know".[62]

"It ain't over till it's over!"

A famous quotation from baseball player and manager Yogi Berra; one of many yogiisms. Berra used it in 1973, while managing the New York Mets, to mean a team is not out of the pennant race until they are mathematically eliminated.[63] In sports, it is usually used to mean that a game is not officially over until time expires or the final out is registered, and that the players need to stay mentally focused until that point, particularly when their team has a large lead but there is sufficient time for the opposing team to come back and win. The original and self-evident adage, misstated by Berra, is "The game is not over until the last man is out." In non-sports contexts, the quotation means that one should not assume a dangerous or disadvantageous situation has ended or passed until this has been confirmed by other events.

"In spite of last winter's nice snowpack and a wet summer, here's the bad news about New Mexico's drought: It ain't over till it's over, and it ain't over". — Staci Matlock, The New Mexican, 9 October 2005.[64]

"It's like déjà vu all over again!"

Another famous (attributed) yogiism;[65] a redundant way of saying "Here we go again!" It has come into general usage to describe any situation that seems to be observably repeating itself.

"Kay told CNN he is worried because he's hearing some of the same signals about Iran and its nuclear program that were heard as the Bush administration made its case for the war in Iraq. 'It's déjà vu all over again,' Kay said". — David Kay, former U.S. chief weapons inspector (quote).[66]

K

knock it out of the park

See hit it out of the park.

knock the cover off the ball

To succeed beyond expectation. Derived from the act of hitting the ball exceptionally hard, so as to make the leather covering come off. Tearing the cover off the ball was possible in the early days of baseball, since a single ball was often used for the entire game (as is the case in the game of cricket). The phrase was used in a newspaper account of a baseball game as early as 1866.[67]

"In the last two quarters, we knocked the cover off the ball. . . . We exceeded analysts' expectations on Wall Street and our own guidance in both quarters".[68]

L

late innings

See "ninth inning".

leadoff hitter

In baseball, a leadoff hitter is the player who bats first in the lineup. It can also refer to any batter who bats first in an inning. In other fields of endeavor, the leadoff hitter is the one who goes first in a series.

headline: "The American Patriot Program announces August leadoff hitters for its national campaign".[69]

"The decision to place Ms. Obama centre stage in Denver is something of a gamble; rarely have the spouses of presidential candidates played leadoff hitter in such a high-stakes political exercise".[70]

left field

As in "that insult really came out of left field". Unusual, unexpected, or irrational. In baseball, the fielders are focused on home plate, which is the place from which they expect balls to be hit to them. If a ball (e.g., one that was previously hit into the stands) or some other object is thrown at the fielder or onto the field from the outfield seats behind them, it is unexpected and surprising. This may be the origin of the expression "out of left field." First used in the idiomatic sense in the early 20th century by song pluggers working in the American music industry to indicate an unexpectedly successful song.[71]

"Depp's performance came out of left field in The Curse of the Black Pearl; nobody had ever thought of channeling Keith Richards and Pepé Le Pew before". — Kent Williams, Isthmus: The Daily Page.[72]

M

major league

At the highest level. Synonym: big league.

"When you've landed a tenure-track position at that university, you're playing in the major leagues."[73]

Mendoza line

A line marking a very poor performance or the threshold for barely competent performance, referring to the Mendoza line of a .200 batting average in baseball.

"Over the last five years, Wall Street analysts have only been right once. They're below the Mendoza line, batting just 200. And they're misleading investors again" — Brit Ryle, Taipan Financial News, 13 December 2005.

Murderers' Row

A large group of talented individuals or valuable assets. Most notably used to describe the 1927 New York Yankees, who had fearsome hitters throughout their line-up, although it was used to describe other baseball teams as early as 1905.

"He was the unexpected underdog who comes out of nowhere and starts landing one uppercut after another into the chins of a murderer's [sic] row of 800-pound gorillas." — Andrew Leonard, Salon.com, 10 March 2008.

Headline: "Here's The Murderers' Row Of Talent Bill Simmons Recruited For His New Site" — Noah Davis, Business Insider, 2 June 2011.[74]

N

ninth inning

An expression that an event or process is near the end – in the last of a nine-inning game. Referring to a trend in market expansion, a financial analyst may say "We're in the eighth or ninth inning". During a seemingly never-ending crisis, an analyst might remark "No Ninth Inning for Credit Crisis".[75] The president of an academic association may title his farewell column to the members "A Ninth-Inning Farewell".[76]

"'We're in the late innings for U.S. small-cap stocks,'" said Richard Bernstein, chief investment strategist at Merrill Lynch & Co." – Wall Street Journal, 31 December 2007.[77]

O

o-fer

Also oh-fer. If a baseball batter gets 0 hits in any number of at-bats in a game, he's said to go "oh for" that number (as in 0-3, said as "Oh for three"), or perhaps even more colloquially, to "have an o-fer". In business, an example of an "o-fer" would be to try repeatedly and fail to make any sales.

Under the headline "Senate Dems go O-fer," it is reported: "The Senate just voted on whether to proceed with four budgets: the House 2012 budget, the Toomey budget, the Paul budget, and President Obama's 2012 proposal. All were voted down".[78]

off base

Unawares or by surprise, usually in the phrase "caught off base"; OED dates to 1935. Can also mean misguided, mistaken, or working on faulty assumptions; this usage dates to 1940. Both of these uses derive from the situation of a runner being away from a base and thus in a position to being put out (1872).[79]

"The absence of any sharp new angle, any strong new drive in Mr. Roosevelt's messages reflected the fact that he and his Cabinet (only Messrs. Hull, Murphy, Woodring, Edison and Ickes were at hand) had been caught off-base with the rest of the world by the Hitler-Stalin deal, the sudden push for Poland". — Time, 3 September 1939.[80]

"Lotte Ulbricht replied that Madame Yang was way off base. No one was demanding that oppressed nations live happily with their oppressors, she said, and added that Russia was, as always, 'wholeheartedly behind the revolutionary struggles of colonial peoples.'" — Time, 5 July 1963.[81]

on deck

Next in line to face a particular challenge. In baseball, a batter emerges from the dugout and loosens up "on-deck" just before his turn to face the pitcher. OED mentions usage of "on deck" first in 1867 in the context of baseball ("on deck fig. [orig. U.S.]: at hand; ready for action; alive; in Baseball, next at the bat, with the right or privilege of batting next".)[82]

headline: "Barletta, 0-2, back on deck" – Roderick Random, Scranton Times, 30 May 2009.[83]

lede: "With no one else as formidable, Republicans are pressuring the Hazleton mayor [Barletta] to run against the longtime Democratic congressman next year". – Scranton Times, 30 May 2009.[84]

headline: "Loren French is On Deck to Speak to Us at EntConnect 2007!" – A Better Blogsite, 1 February 2007[85]

one base at a time

In baseball, a manager may adopt a strategy of moving runners along one base at a time rather than emphasizing power hitting and high-scoring innings. In other walks of life, such a step-by-step approach may also be referred to as a "one base at a time" approach.

"Organizations instead need a deep bench of players with varying capabilities and a clear strategy for advancing ideas one base at a time. That's what puts runs on the scoreboard and delivers value to members or customers".[86]

headline: "For RNA polymerase, it's one base at a time".[87]

out of left field

See left field.

out of one's league

A poor match for someone's talents or capabilities. In baseball, professional leagues are classified according to their level of play and quality of talent, with Major League Baseball being the highest level of play and the various leagues comprising Minor League Baseball ranked below. If a player is competing in a league above their level of ability, they are said to be "out of their league". This idiom is particularly applied to dating and romantic relationships, in which a person is attempting to date someone who is more accomplished, better-looking, or wealthier than themselves.[88]

"He (or she) is too tall, too attractive, too smart, too funny, too ambitious or just too plain awesome to be interested in you, right? Wrong. I've come to the realization that no one is truly "out of my league," and here's why."[89]

P

pinch hit

To act as a substitute or stand-in for someone when in a "pinch", especially in an emergency. In baseball, sometimes a substitute batter would be brought in, especially at a crucial point in the game. The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first non-baseball use in 1918, from sports columnist and short-story writer Ring Lardner:[90]

"He had the thing running, with a piece of common binding twine pinch-hitting for the cord." — Ring Lardner, My Four Weeks In France, viii.179 (1918).

pitch a shutout

To not allow an opponent any wins. In baseball, a shutout occurs when a pitcher does not allow the opponent any runs.

"The Republican Party pitched a shutout in the South in 2000 and 2004".[91]

play ball

To get going, or to start. Before every baseball game, and after a dead ball situation such as a foul ball or a time-out, the umpire traditionally shouts "play ball" in order to (re-)start the game.[92] AHDI dates this usage to the late 19th century.[93] An alternate meaning, "to cooperate", is not explicitly connected to baseball by ADHI, but is so derived by the Cambridge Dictionary of American Idioms.[94]

"'Eight U.S. attorneys who did not play ball with the political agenda of this administration were dropped from the team,' said Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois".[95]

play softball

To ask easy questions. Perhaps the opposite of playing hardball (baseball) or throwing difficult or probing questions at a respondent.

in a pickle

To be caught in a tough spot. See rundown.

R

rain-check (rain-cheque)

 
A rain check at CVS, shown below the empty shelf for the sold-out item. This rain check never expires, as opposed to the original sale.[96]

A ticket given to a spectator at an outdoor event providing for admission at a later date (in lieu of a refund of entrance money), should the event be interrupted by rain; an assurance of a deferred extension of an offer, especially an assurance that a customer can take advantage of a sale later if the item or service offered is not available (as by being sold out); or a (sometimes vague) promise to accept a social offer at an unnamed later date. The latter two meanings derive from the first, which dates at least to 1877[97][98][99] – see rain check (baseball) – and metaphorical usage dates to at least 1896 – see rain check.

"To deal with frustration among holiday shoppers hunting for its Wii game console, Nintendo Co. and retailer GameStop Corp. are launching a rain check program". — Tribune wires, Chicago Tribune, 19 December 2007.[100]

"Another scheduled member of the party, Pat McKenna, White House doorkeeper for thirty-five years, was prevented from making the trip due to an illness in his immediate family, but the President said at his press conference today that he had given McKenna a rain check on the next cruise." — "Roosevelt starts for ocean cruise." The New York Times, April 30, 1938.[101]

rally cap

In baseball, a rally cap is a baseball cap worn while inside-out and/or backwards or in another unconventional manner by players or fans, in order to will a team into a come-from-behind rally late in the game. The rally cap is primarily a baseball superstition. The term may also be used by other groups, such as stock market traders.

headline: "Muni Market Traders Keep Their Rally Caps On" – Patrick McGee, The Bond Buyer, 15 April 2011.[102]

relief pitcher

In baseball a relief pitcher comes in as a replacement for the starting pitcher or another relief pitcher. A relief pitcher in other realms of activity also comes in as a substitute or replacement for the initial or regular occupant of a role.

"Vincent B. Orange doesn't see himself as an opportunist. Rather, he's more of a 'relief pitcher' with the chops to push the District's business goals, he said, after council member Harry Thomas Jr. relinquished control of the Committee on Economic Development while he fights a lawsuit accusing him of taking public funds for personal use".—The Washington Times, 9 June 2011.[103]

rhubarb

A heated argument or noisy dispute; especially, between players on a playing field. Originally the word traditionally muttered by actors in a play to provide background noise. Online Etymology Dictionary attributes the "loud squabble on the field" usage to broadcaster Garry Schumacher in 1938,[104] while OED and CDS both credit sportscaster Red Barber at a baseball game in 1943. OED's first non-baseball cite is 1949.[105]

"If the theater people won their point, it was not much of a point to win. The entire rhubarb, after all, was about nothing but money". — Time, 7 June 1963.[106]

right off the bat

Immediately; without any delay. The Oxford English Dictionary dates this term to 1914 in Maclean's, a Canadian magazine. An older term, "hot from the bat" dates to the 1888 play Meisterschaft by Mark Twain.[107]

"'It was very clear right off the bat that the loss of Cdk5 made them have a much stronger associative memory,' Professor Bibb said". — Reuters, The New York Times, 29 May 2007.[108]

S

"Say it ain't so, Joe!"

An expression of disbelief. A reference to the Black Sox scandal of 1919, when several members of the Chicago White Sox conspired with gamblers to lose the World Series on purpose. When Shoeless Joe Jackson was implicated in the scandal, an apocryphal story says that a young fan approached him and said, "Say it ain't so, Joe!"

screwball

Eccentric, zany, or crazy; OED dates this usage to 1933.[109] The screwball is a rarely used pitch (because of its effect on the arm) that is intended to behave erratically — it "breaks" in the opposite direction a curveball would break.

"And now, as we enter not only the best season for stocks in the calendar year, but also the very best three quarters in the four-year election cycle, you'd think you should just sit back and enjoy the ride, right? But I'm worried the market may be getting ready to throw us a screwball".MarketWatch, 16 October 2010.[110]

shutout

See "pitch a shutout".

singles or hit singles

To seek modest, or step-by-step gains instead of large ones. In baseball, hitting singles or playing small ball instead of seeking to hit home runs is sometimes a good strategy for teams that do not have many power hitters.

"With the duration [of bonds] tailwind on the wane, investors must literally scour the globe for opportunities, seeking coins and jewels rather than treasure chests. In baseball vernacular, investors must now aim to hit singles rather than swinging for the fences". – Anthony J. Crescenzi, Morningstar.com, 22 December 2010.[111]

small ball

In modern baseball play and analysis (sabermetrics), small ball refers to a strategy that focuses on gaining a small or step-by-step edge on the opponent not by trying to knock the ball out of the ballpark but instead by getting singles, stealing bases, and moving runners along one base at a time. In other endeavors, a similar focus on the details, winning a few points at a time rather than trying for large gains, may also be described as small ball.

headline: "The president plays small ball" – Charles Krauthammer, The Washington Post, 26 January 2012.[112]

headline: "In Need of a Game Change, Santorum Plays Small Ball" – Nate Silver, The New York Times, 17 March 2012.[113]

softball

See "play softball".

step up to the plate

Often shortened to step up. To rise to an occasion in life. Refers to when a player must approach home plate to take a turn at batting. OED cites baseball usage in 1875, general usage in 1919.[114]

headline: "First Responders Stepped Up to the Plate".[115]

headline: "Pig Farmers Have Stepped Up to the Plate".[116]

strike

As in "strike out", "three strikes, you're out", "a strike against you", "he was born with two strikes against him". In baseball, a strike is when the batter swings at and misses a pitch, or when a pitch crosses the strike zone without the batter swinging. A batter with three strikes is out and must stop batting.

The word strike has crept into common English usage to mean a failure, shortcoming, or loss. When a person has "gotten three strikes" and "struck out", they have failed completely. The three strikes laws refer to more severe punishments for criminals with a third conviction. Someone seeking romance with another person may "strike out" and fail to impress on a first meeting. Also A swing and a miss.

headline: "Everybody Struck Out in Marietta Teen Drinking Incident" – Atlanta Journal and Constitution, 25 February 2010.[117]

Having "two strikes against you" means that you have just one remaining chance to succeed at something, or that you are given little chance to succeed, perhaps because you have been prejudged.

"The British bank Barclays has announced its next CEO. But Bob Diamond already seemingly has two strikes against him going in. One thing, he's an American. And number two, he's head of the company's investment banking arm". – American Public Media, "Marketplace", 7 September 2010.[118]

strike out swinging

To fail while giving it your best effort.

strike out looking

To fail by being passive, without even making an effort.

swing and miss

To try but fail, like swinging a bat and missing the ball. Also see "whiff."

"I've swung and missed a lot in my hunt for vintage Levis".[119]

Referring to the disappointing purchase of a living-room couch, "Todd: Hey batter, hey batter, sometimes when you're looking for the rainbow curve away, you get the heater down the middle. Maybe that's why you swung and missed".[120]

"The 1988-2000 employment projections: how accurate were they? In the late 1980s, we projected future employment in scores of occupations for the 1988-2000 period. That future is now the past. See where we scored a hit, landed in the ballpark, and – now and then – swung and missed.[121]

swing for the fences

To try for a substantial gain; to make a big score. In baseball, to swing for the fences is to try to hit a home run, rather than trying to hit singles or play small ball.

"These are opportunities that traders look for every day. That many of them noticed it and swung for the fences all at once is not collusion, it's just the sign of a huge softball coming right down the line".[122]

switch hitter

Refers to baseball players who are capable of hitting as a left-handed or right-handed batter (OED, 1948).[123] Colloquially, a switch hitter[124] is a bisexual. More broadly, "switch-hitting" can refer to an ability to perform double functions or roles.

An article titled "Hatteras Plans Switch-Hitting Ethernet" discusses a network switch that can operate either on fiber optic or copper wiring.[125]

T

take cuts at someone

In baseball, a batter swinging the bat at a ball is sometimes said to "take cuts" at the ball. A person who "takes cuts" at somebody else may be taking a verbal swing or striking a blow at the person's reputation.

headline: "Ex-teammates take cuts at A-Rod".[126]

headline: "Opponents Sure to Take Cuts at Stadium Votes in Anaheim Political Game"[127]

three strikes law

See Strike.

took the collar

From the phrase for failing to get any hits, it can be used to indicate failure at something. Referring to the competition between two newspapers, the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News:

"The News, you recall, took the collar as the 'failing newspaper' when the two sought Justice Department approval in 2000 to merge their business operations".[128]

touch base(s)

As in "we will touch base(s) at the meeting". To make contact with someone, to inform someone of one's plans or activities, perhaps in anticipation of an event. In baseball, a player who is touching a base is not in danger of being put out. Another explanation is that a player must briefly touch each of the bases in order after hitting a home run. It may also refer to the fact that after a fly ball has been caught for an out, a runner on base who has taken a lead or is standing off his base towards the next base, must go back to touch or tag that base ("tag up") before he can advance to the next one.

"Trevor, it's been a while. I'd like to touch bases with you next week to discuss our quarterly sales targets."

triple play

In baseball a triple play is the rare act of making three outs during the same continuous play. The OED attributes the original usage of "triple play" to the American game of baseball as early as 1869.[129]

headline: "President Obama's Wednesday NYC Triple Play." – Celeste Katz, New York Daily News, 26 April 2011.[130]

lede on same story: "Brace yourself, New York City! President Obama is returning tomorrow for his third visit in less than a month, bringing the increasingly familiar swirl of traffic – and buckraking – that surrounds presidential campaigns".

headline: "Cosmic Triple-Play: Asteroid Flyby, Fireball over Utah, Meteor Shower" – Charles Q. Choi, SPACE.com, 18 November 2009.[131]

W

wheelhouse

From the term for a batter's power zone, usually waist high and over the middle of the plate. Etymology attributed to Peter Tamony who suggested that batters "wheel" at the ball and "take good, level 'roundhouse' swings."[132][133]

"Carville also said he had not spoken with Hillary Clinton about Richardson's endorsement, but that he was outraged. 'I doubt if Gov. Richardson and I will be terribly close in the future,' he said, but 'I've had my say. . . . I got one in the wheelhouse and I tagged him.'"[134]

whiff

In general usage, the word "whiff" may refer to the movement or sound of air or wind, perhaps as an object moves through it. In baseball a whiff is when a batter swings and misses a pitch. Such usage in baseball is attributed by the OED to 1913. Perhaps derived from this, the term "whiff" has also come to mean trying and failing at something. Also see "swing and miss".

"After Richardson whiffed on the question, Joe Biden parked it".[135]

"Yahoo and MSN each whiffed on six questions. There was only one question that baffled all the search engines".[136]

whole new ball game

Also brand new ball game; whole 'nother ball game. In common usage, a "whole new ball game" or "brand new ball game" signifies a drastic turn of events, a completely altered situation. In baseball, an announcer says "it's a whole new ball game" when the trailing team ties the score or takes the lead, usually after being behind by several runs. AHDI traces this to the 1960s.[137] A "whole 'nother ball game" signifies something completely unrelated, different, or irrelevant. Also said extensively and out of context in the world of selling ads for trade mags.

Under the headline "It's a Whole New Ballgame for Obama," it is stated that, "Barack Obama, we all know by now, is not an ideologue. But where his roots are planted is also nowhere near the progressive pendulum, particularly on domestic issues. Now he's got a playing field that suits his natural political conservatism". – Taylor Marsh, Huffington Post, 7 January 2011.[138]

"In fact, on-demand applications are a whole 'nother ballgame — which is why personally I try to avoid the popular phrase software as a service (SaaS) since I feel it's a phrase that's born of the 'nothing changes' mindset". – Phil Wainewright, ZDNet, 16 March 2006.[139]

See also

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External links

  • USA Today article on sports jargon used in business

glossary, english, language, idioms, derived, from, baseball, this, alphabetical, list, common, english, language, idioms, based, baseball, excluding, extended, metaphor, referring, including, illustrative, examples, each, entry, particularly, american, englis. This is an alphabetical list of common English language idioms based on baseball excluding the extended metaphor referring to sex and including illustrative examples for each entry Particularly American English has been enriched by expressions derived from the game of baseball See also the Glossary of baseball terms for the jargon of the game itself as used by participants fans reporters announcers and analysts of the game Contents 1 B 1 1 ballpark 1 2 batting 1000 1 3 beanball or throw a beanball 1 4 big hitter s 1 5 big league s 1 6 brand new ballgame 1 7 brush back 1 8 bush league 2 C 2 1 Charley horse 2 2 cleanup hitter 2 3 closer 2 4 cover one s bases 2 5 curve curveball 3 D 3 1 double header 3 2 down to the last out 3 3 ducks on a pond 4 E 4 1 extra innings 5 F 5 1 first base 5 2 first inning or early innings 5 3 foot in the bucket 5 4 four bagger 6 G 6 1 grand slam 6 2 grandstanding 6 3 ground ball 7 H 7 1 hardball play hardball 7 2 heavy hitter 7 3 hit it out of the park 7 4 hit or miss 7 5 hit singles 7 6 home run 8 I 8 1 inside baseball 8 2 It ain t over till it s over 8 3 It s like deja vu all over again 9 K 9 1 knock it out of the park 9 2 knock the cover off the ball 10 L 10 1 late innings 10 2 leadoff hitter 10 3 left field 11 M 11 1 major league 11 2 Mendoza line 11 3 Murderers Row 12 N 12 1 ninth inning 13 O 13 1 o fer 13 2 off base 13 3 on deck 13 4 one base at a time 13 5 out of left field 13 6 out of one s league 14 P 14 1 pinch hit 14 2 pitch a shutout 14 3 play ball 14 4 play softball 14 5 in a pickle 15 R 15 1 rain check rain cheque 15 2 rally cap 15 3 relief pitcher 15 4 rhubarb 15 5 right off the bat 16 S 16 1 Say it ain t so Joe 16 2 screwball 16 3 shutout 16 4 singles or hit singles 16 5 small ball 16 6 softball 16 7 step up to the plate 16 8 strike 16 9 strike out swinging 16 10 strike out looking 16 11 swing and miss 16 12 swing for the fences 16 13 switch hitter 17 T 17 1 take cuts at someone 17 2 three strikes law 17 3 took the collar 17 4 touch base s 17 5 triple play 18 W 18 1 wheelhouse 18 2 whiff 18 3 whole new ball game 19 See also 20 References 21 External linksB Editballpark Edit Ballpark in the ballpark ballpark figure and out of the ballpark Ballpark has been used to mean a broad area of approximation or similarity or a range within which comparison is possible this usage the Oxford English Dictionary dates to 1960 Another meaning sphere of activity or influence is cited in 1963 In the right ballpark meaning within reasonable bounds dates to 1968 A ballpark figure or ballpark estimate one that is reasonably accurate dates to at least 1957 1 The meaning of out of the ball park is to hit a home run its non baseball equivalent is to do something well or exactly as it should be done 2 They said Itanium would never be their fastest 32 bit processor but it would be in the ballpark The original x86 hardware execution mechanism was not in the ballpark It was barely in the parking lot around the ballpark Brookwood said Stephen Shankland The New York Times 23 April 2003 3 Patrick Wiles a vice president of First Pioneer Farm Credit in Riverhead said the ballpark figure for prime vineyard land on the North Fork is 50 000 to 60 000 an acre assuming the development rights have been sold Howard G Goldberg The New York Times 18 July 2004 4 MSNBC said Hillary knocked it out of the park New American Media 27 August 2008 5 batting 1000 Edit Also batting a thousand Getting everything in a series of items right In baseball someone with a batting average of one thousand written as 1 000 has had a hit for every at bat in the relevant time period e g in a game AHDI dates its non baseball usage to the 1920s 6 May also be used sarcastically when someone is getting everything wrong But Boston Scientific also needs to hope that a rare event does not become magnified he said It has to be pretty much batting a thousand for a time he said Reed Abelson The New York Times 27 July 2004 7 beanball or throw a beanball Edit To attack an opponent by aiming at their head In baseball a beanball is a pitch intentionally thrown at a batter s head In politics it can be a verbal assault or a policy that is targeted to seriously hurt a particular opponent or group headline Senator Jim Bunning Throws Beanball at America s Unemployed Mason Lerner The Faster Times 26 February 2010 8 Note Then Sen Bunning had an established career as a Major League Baseball pitcher prior to running for public office dd dd But Brown and Whitman didn t swing at the questions instead choosing to stick to a game of political beanball trading jabs on Whitman s housekeeper a Brown aide s whore remark and even verbal miscues Steven Luo California Beat 13 October 2010 9 big hitter s Edit At the highest level used as a noun He is a big hitter big league s Edit At the highest level used as a noun You re in the big leagues now or an adjective big league lawyer OED cites big league as specifically American Major League Baseball and cites its first use in 1899 the non baseball use appears in 1947 10 Synonym major league Contrast bush league below For a listener who last heard the New Haven Symphony in the mid 60 s in a game but scrappy performance of Britten s War Requiem its concert on Friday evening was a happy surprise Under its music director Michael Palmer it sounded for the most part like a big league band at home in a big league setting James Oestreich The New York Times 25 January 1994 11 brand new ballgame Edit In baseball when a team that has been behind in runs ties up the game it is sometimes said to be a brand new ballgame This does not mean that the game starts over from the first inning it only means that neither team is ahead and the game continues In other realms the term is used to connote a change in tactics or who is ahead in a competition It s a Brand New Ballgame for Outsourcing Real Estate John C Maher National Real Estate Investor 1 July 2005 12 Brand new ball game New peanut program brings change Paul L Hollis Southwest Farm Press 21 March 2002 13 brush back Edit To subvert or threaten verbally In baseball a nickname for any pitch intended to establish a pitcher s command of the inside portion of the strike zone usually involving throwing a pitch at or near a hitter who may be covering that portion of the strike zone Its baseball usage is cited in many dictionaries 14 but its transition to the vernacular has yet to be dated The Washington Times George Archibald reports that Gerald A Reynolds assistant secretary for civil rights in the Department of Education has sent a long overdue brush back letter to college and university officials concerning their odious and oppressive campus speech codes David Limbaugh The Washington Times August 19 2003 15 One spokeswoman Andrea Saul has been throwing brushback pitches at reporters who write about Romney s faith asking if they would write similar stories about Jews Jeffrey Goldberg Bloomberg News June 18 2012 16 bush league Edit Amateur unsophisticated unprofessional From the baseball term for a second rate baseball league and therefore its players as in bush league pitcher etc OED cites its first baseball use as 1906 although there are uses as early as 1896 17 non baseball in 1914 18 Contrast big league above Kinsley who does come off as the stereotypical Los Angeles hating East Coast wonk said recently that because L A is the second biggest city in the country it s really bush league to care about where the writers are from Catherine Seipp National Review March 24 2005 19 C EditCharley horse Edit Sudden stiffness or a cramp in the leg Of unknown etymology CDS cites its first use c 1887 as baseball slang OED states such cramps occur especially in baseball players and cites this usage to 1888 20 Tried on more than 1 400 patients for almost two years it has proved effective for many kinds of pain in the muscles and around joints charley horse tennis elbow stiff neck torticollis wryneck whiplash injury muscular rheumatism and muscle pain resulting from slipped disks Time 8 June 1959 21 cleanup hitter Edit Someone who comes in to solve a problem or lead a team In baseball a cleanup hitter is the fourth man in the batting order typically a slugger who is expected to clear the bases by driving other runners home to score runs The OED first attributes cleanup hitter or cleanup man in its modern baseball usage to 1922 22 Under the headline Merrill s cleanup hitter new position focuses on quality of research it is stated that at Merrill Lynch amp Co Inc the buy sell and hold buck stops with William J Genco 23 Under the headline Trimeris Gets a Cleanup Hitter it is stated that Yesterday tiny drug developer Trimeris Nasdaq TRMS announced that it finally found a permanent CEO to help get itself in order following the resignation of its former leader a year ago 24 Referring to President George W Bush There is a reason he is the current president and it is not just because of his Daddy or money I think he makes a pretty solid cleanup hitter for the Republican Party and brought home the points made during the previous 4 days of the convention 25 closer Edit In baseball a closing pitcher brought in to finish the game In business the person brought in to close the deal get things done 26 cover one s bases Edit Also cover all the bases To ensure safety In baseball a defensive player covers a base by standing close to it ensuring a runner cannot reach it safely In business covering one s bases means being prepared for every contingency 27 Mentioned but not dated by Oxford University Press 28 Arson investigators sifted through the rubble of an Airdrie Stud barn today but failed to determine the cause of a fire that killed 15 thoroughbred broodmares and yearlings Saturday night The horses were worth more than 1 million according to Brereton Jones owner of the 3 000 acre 12 km2 stud farm We do not have any reason to believe it was arson but you just want to be sure you cover all the bases he said Associated Press in The New York Times 7 January 1985 29 Cisco s FastHub 400 series has the bases covered 30 curve curveball Edit As in He really threw me a curveball A surprise often completely and totally unexpected and usually unpleasant The curveball is a pitch in baseball designed to fool the batter by curving unexpectedly AHDI dates this usage to the mid 20th century 31 Because of my personal story I m very interested in illness One thing we discovered as a family is that when you re thrown a curveball like cancer or multiple sclerosis often people do not know what to do first Meredith Vieira quoted by Jeff Chu Time 27 August 2006 32 Desormeaux chalked up the latest loss his second so close to the Triple Crown to another twist in a life so full of them Life throws curves he said Some of us hit it and some of us will sulk around We ve continued to hit the curveball The New York Times 8 June 2008 33 D Editdouble header Edit Two contests or similar events held on the same day with the same participants The city s three mayoral candidates finished Wednesday s political double header with a debate at First Congregational United Church for Christ The evening debate did not differ greatly from the luncheon forum that local Rotarians and Kiwanians hosted earlier in the day Andrew Edwards Contra Costa Times 21 October 2009 34 down to the last out Edit To be near the end of a competition and have just one last chance to succeed Also sometimes expressed as down to the last strike Hillary Clinton is now down to her last out 35 ducks on a pond Edit In baseball having runners in scoring position ready for a batter to drive them home In business a situation with a good chance to succeed 36 E Editextra innings Edit To extend the original time allotted in order to break a tie or settle an issue In baseball this means going beyond the standard nine inning length of a game headline Extra Innings for the Cloned Food Debate Pallavi Gogoi Bloomberg Businessweek 2 April 2007 37 headline Microsoft Yahoo Game Going Into Extra Innings Erika Morphy E Commerce Times 5 June 2008 38 F Editfirst base Edit In baseball a batter hopes to reach first base and then continue around second and third bases before reaching home and scoring a run In interpersonal relations an individual who cannot get to first base with another person is unable to achieve some initial goal or to establish a relationship A kiss might be first base in a romantic relationship See Baseball metaphors for sex Getting an appointment with a potential customer might be first base in a business transaction or negotiation Under the headline Getting Past First Base a writer asks How do you turn an initial contact with a prospect into a fully fledged business relationship It s the essence of sales but it s an area where many people really struggle Ian Brodie 8 November 2008 39 first inning or early innings Edit The early stages of a competition A game of baseball typically lasts nine innings so the first inning or the early innings the first three innings often do not determine the outcome Also see Ninth inning below headline Geithner Tax reform debate in first inning Bernie Becker The Hill 27 January 2011 40 headline Early Innings of a Banking Recovery Duncan Frearson Smith Street Capital July 13 2010 41 foot in the bucket Edit To act in a timid or cowardly fashion A batter who steps away from home plate with his leading foot usually in fear of being struck by a pitched ball instead of a straight ahead stride is said to step in the bucket Even if you haven t stepped in the bucket yet you may one day So here are Be Better Guys Tips for Handling a Screw Up at Work Be Better Guys A Guy s Guide to Getting a Life 17 June 2009 42 four bagger Edit A complete success compare home run below In baseball four bagger is another term for a home run since the batter who hits a home run touches all four bags or bases including home plate A four bagger in baseball may also mean any combination of hits and errors in one at bat where the batter touches all four bases a triple and an error for example a double and a two base error a single and a three base error or four base error Referring to the prospects of a high tech company a headline reads Is Netflix a Four Bagger in the Making 43 The Motley Fool 6 October 2013 G Editgrand slam Edit Any sudden sweeping victory A batter who hits a home run with bases loaded has hit a four run grand slam a term originally borrowed from contract bridge for winning thirteen tricks Aside from baseball the term now refers to a situation which may or may not end badly for the protagonist but from which they emerge as an obvious winner The term also can refer to anything good which comes in four parts such as a grand slam breakfast headline Natural Gas in Bear Market Grand Slam Patti Domm Market Insider CNBC 11 February 2011 44 headline Boeing Hits Grand Slam with Four DoD Deals John Adams GovconWire 7 September 2010 45 grandstanding Edit In baseball a player who shows off or showboats to win the favor of the fans in the grandstand is said to be grandstanding In other contexts including politics playing to the crowd the audience or the media might be described as grandstanding Tellem weighed in with a thoughtful back page article in this Sunday s New York Times regarding the recent Congressional and mainstream media grandstanding over steroids Jay Jaffe Futility Infielder 5 April 2005 46 headline Stop the grandstanding on the debt ceiling CNN Money 5 January 2011 47 Opinions were varied and passionate but there was no sniping no partisan grandstanding Alex Williams The New York Times June 22 2012 48 ground ball Edit A prosaic or ordinary accomplishment beneath higher hopes or expectations In baseball a ground ball is a batted ball that bounces or rolls on the ground perhaps for a base hit perhaps for an out Sony once hit home runs but now it s lost its touch said Akihiko Jojima an analyst and author of the book Sony s Sickness Sony still makes competent products but they re all just boring ground balls Hiroko Tabuchi New York Times 28 March 2010 49 H Edithardball play hardball Edit To be or act tough or aggressive Refers to the comparison between balls in baseball and softball As a synonym for baseball OED dates this use of hardball to 1883 its non baseball use appears in 1973 50 Hauser would like to extend its three year contract with Bristol Myers becoming a supplier of the material for semi synthetic Taxol I think this is just tough bargaining said Deborah Wardwell of Dain Bosworth Securities It seems to suggest hardball tactics Milt Freudenheim The New York Times 10 January 2007 51 heavy hitter Edit A powerful or commanding person a leader In baseball a heavy hitter is a slugger someone who hits a lot of extra base hits or home runs In business the heavy hitters may be those who draw the most clients or make the most sales or who lead the organization In politics a heavy hitter draws crowds or has a lot of power or influence headline Heavy hitters line up for Hong Kong Tourism pitch 52 headline Boeing uses him as its heavy hitter As it s done with other troubled programs the company is relying on Patrick Shanahan to get the 787 back on track Los Angeles Times 24 February 2008 53 headline UW Adds Heavy Hitters from High Tech and Biotech to Turn More Ideas Into Companies 54 hit it out of the park Edit Also knock it out of the park To achieve complete or even a spectacular success compare home run below A home run is automatically scored when a batter strikes the ball with such force as to hit it out of the stadium or playing field 11 55 AM Kerry stumbled over the question of whether God is on America s side But Edwards hit it out of the park with his anecdote about Abraham Lincoln saying America is on God s side He is the more nimble debater and conversationalist Katherine Q Seelye The New York Times 29 February 2004 55 hit or miss Edit To either achieve success or completely fail In baseball when a batter swings their bat at a pitched ball they may either hit the ball or miss it headline Treating Depression Can Be Hit or Miss Los Angeles Times 3 August 2009 56 Hit or Miss Kim Kardashian s T Shirt Dress 57 hit singles Edit See singles home run Edit A complete success opposite of strike out often used in the verb phrase hit a home run OED cites this usage to 1965 58 HGTV caught on quickly and is now carried in 90 million homes The Food Network has been a home run as well luring viewers interested in cooking Geraldine Fabrikant The New York Times 14 August 2006 59 It was Silver s later 15 month training period with the Apollo 15 astronauts and that crew s brilliant geological performance on the lunar plain between the Apennine Mountains and Hadley Rille a sinuous gorge that in Silver s words hit a home run Marcy Drexler Caltech News 1999 60 I Editinside baseball Edit Main article inside baseball metaphor Within the sport inside baseball refers to the stratagems that managers use to get their team to score runs perhaps not as obvious as simply getting players to hit home runs or to catch the ball but to do the little things that move runners towards home plate Akin to the idea of small ball Outside the game inside baseball may refer to the behind the scenes machinations of politicians bankers or other professionals under the headline Dana Milbank s Inside Baseball a news story begins With a few deft strokes and in fewer than 25 inches Dana Milbank draws behind the scenes portraits of Washington power with such dexterity and hilarity that his Washington Sketch column is a must read for anyone who wants to know how politics in this city really works Brigid Schulte The Washington Post 2 March 2010 61 I once had to hire a writer to create my firm s brochure because what I did was far too inside baseball Meaning too focused on the details only an insider could love and not enough on what the audience wanted to know 62 It ain t over till it s over Edit A famous quotation from baseball player and manager Yogi Berra one of many yogiisms Berra used it in 1973 while managing the New York Mets to mean a team is not out of the pennant race until they are mathematically eliminated 63 In sports it is usually used to mean that a game is not officially over until time expires or the final out is registered and that the players need to stay mentally focused until that point particularly when their team has a large lead but there is sufficient time for the opposing team to come back and win The original and self evident adage misstated by Berra is The game is not over until the last man is out In non sports contexts the quotation means that one should not assume a dangerous or disadvantageous situation has ended or passed until this has been confirmed by other events In spite of last winter s nice snowpack and a wet summer here s the bad news about New Mexico s drought It ain t over till it s over and it ain t over Staci Matlock The New Mexican 9 October 2005 64 It s like deja vu all over again Edit Another famous attributed yogiism 65 a redundant way of saying Here we go again It has come into general usage to describe any situation that seems to be observably repeating itself Kay told CNN he is worried because he s hearing some of the same signals about Iran and its nuclear program that were heard as the Bush administration made its case for the war in Iraq It s deja vu all over again Kay said David Kay former U S chief weapons inspector quote 66 K Editknock it out of the park Edit See hit it out of the park knock the cover off the ball Edit To succeed beyond expectation Derived from the act of hitting the ball exceptionally hard so as to make the leather covering come off Tearing the cover off the ball was possible in the early days of baseball since a single ball was often used for the entire game as is the case in the game of cricket The phrase was used in a newspaper account of a baseball game as early as 1866 67 In the last two quarters we knocked the cover off the ball We exceeded analysts expectations on Wall Street and our own guidance in both quarters 68 L Editlate innings Edit See ninth inning leadoff hitter Edit In baseball a leadoff hitter is the player who bats first in the lineup It can also refer to any batter who bats first in an inning In other fields of endeavor the leadoff hitter is the one who goes first in a series headline The American Patriot Program announces August leadoff hitters for its national campaign 69 The decision to place Ms Obama centre stage in Denver is something of a gamble rarely have the spouses of presidential candidates played leadoff hitter in such a high stakes political exercise 70 left field Edit As in that insult really came out of left field Unusual unexpected or irrational In baseball the fielders are focused on home plate which is the place from which they expect balls to be hit to them If a ball e g one that was previously hit into the stands or some other object is thrown at the fielder or onto the field from the outfield seats behind them it is unexpected and surprising This may be the origin of the expression out of left field First used in the idiomatic sense in the early 20th century by song pluggers working in the American music industry to indicate an unexpectedly successful song 71 Depp s performance came out of left field in The Curse of the Black Pearl nobody had ever thought of channeling Keith Richards and Pepe Le Pew before Kent Williams Isthmus The Daily Page 72 M Editmajor league Edit At the highest level Synonym big league When you ve landed a tenure track position at that university you re playing in the major leagues 73 Mendoza line Edit A line marking a very poor performance or the threshold for barely competent performance referring to the Mendoza line of a 200 batting average in baseball Over the last five years Wall Street analysts have only been right once They re below the Mendoza line batting just 200 And they re misleading investors again Brit Ryle Taipan Financial News 13 December 2005 Murderers Row Edit A large group of talented individuals or valuable assets Most notably used to describe the 1927 New York Yankees who had fearsome hitters throughout their line up although it was used to describe other baseball teams as early as 1905 He was the unexpected underdog who comes out of nowhere and starts landing one uppercut after another into the chins of a murderer s sic row of 800 pound gorillas Andrew Leonard Salon com 10 March 2008 Headline Here s The Murderers Row Of Talent Bill Simmons Recruited For His New Site Noah Davis Business Insider 2 June 2011 74 N Editninth inning Edit An expression that an event or process is near the end in the last of a nine inning game Referring to a trend in market expansion a financial analyst may say We re in the eighth or ninth inning During a seemingly never ending crisis an analyst might remark No Ninth Inning for Credit Crisis 75 The president of an academic association may title his farewell column to the members A Ninth Inning Farewell 76 We re in the late innings for U S small cap stocks said Richard Bernstein chief investment strategist at Merrill Lynch amp Co Wall Street Journal 31 December 2007 77 O Edito fer Edit Also oh fer If a baseball batter gets 0 hits in any number of at bats in a game he s said to go oh for that number as in 0 3 said as Oh for three or perhaps even more colloquially to have an o fer In business an example of an o fer would be to try repeatedly and fail to make any sales Under the headline Senate Dems go O fer it is reported The Senate just voted on whether to proceed with four budgets the House 2012 budget the Toomey budget the Paul budget and President Obama s 2012 proposal All were voted down 78 off base Edit Unawares or by surprise usually in the phrase caught off base OED dates to 1935 Can also mean misguided mistaken or working on faulty assumptions this usage dates to 1940 Both of these uses derive from the situation of a runner being away from a base and thus in a position to being put out 1872 79 The absence of any sharp new angle any strong new drive in Mr Roosevelt s messages reflected the fact that he and his Cabinet only Messrs Hull Murphy Woodring Edison and Ickes were at hand had been caught off base with the rest of the world by the Hitler Stalin deal the sudden push for Poland Time 3 September 1939 80 Lotte Ulbricht replied that Madame Yang was way off base No one was demanding that oppressed nations live happily with their oppressors she said and added that Russia was as always wholeheartedly behind the revolutionary struggles of colonial peoples Time 5 July 1963 81 on deck Edit Next in line to face a particular challenge In baseball a batter emerges from the dugout and loosens up on deck just before his turn to face the pitcher OED mentions usage of on deck first in 1867 in the context of baseball on deck fig orig U S at hand ready for action alive in Baseball next at the bat with the right or privilege of batting next 82 headline Barletta 0 2 back on deck Roderick Random Scranton Times 30 May 2009 83 lede With no one else as formidable Republicans are pressuring the Hazleton mayor Barletta to run against the longtime Democratic congressman next year Scranton Times 30 May 2009 84 headline Loren French is On Deck to Speak to Us at EntConnect 2007 A Better Blogsite 1 February 2007 85 one base at a time Edit In baseball a manager may adopt a strategy of moving runners along one base at a time rather than emphasizing power hitting and high scoring innings In other walks of life such a step by step approach may also be referred to as a one base at a time approach Organizations instead need a deep bench of players with varying capabilities and a clear strategy for advancing ideas one base at a time That s what puts runs on the scoreboard and delivers value to members or customers 86 headline For RNA polymerase it s one base at a time 87 out of left field Edit See left field out of one s league EditA poor match for someone s talents or capabilities In baseball professional leagues are classified according to their level of play and quality of talent with Major League Baseball being the highest level of play and the various leagues comprising Minor League Baseball ranked below If a player is competing in a league above their level of ability they are said to be out of their league This idiom is particularly applied to dating and romantic relationships in which a person is attempting to date someone who is more accomplished better looking or wealthier than themselves 88 He or she is too tall too attractive too smart too funny too ambitious or just too plain awesome to be interested in you right Wrong I ve come to the realization that no one is truly out of my league and here s why 89 P Editpinch hit Edit To act as a substitute or stand in for someone when in a pinch especially in an emergency In baseball sometimes a substitute batter would be brought in especially at a crucial point in the game The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first non baseball use in 1918 from sports columnist and short story writer Ring Lardner 90 He had the thing running with a piece of common binding twine pinch hitting for the cord Ring Lardner My Four Weeks In France viii 179 1918 pitch a shutout EditTo not allow an opponent any wins In baseball a shutout occurs when a pitcher does not allow the opponent any runs The Republican Party pitched a shutout in the South in 2000 and 2004 91 play ball Edit To get going or to start Before every baseball game and after a dead ball situation such as a foul ball or a time out the umpire traditionally shouts play ball in order to re start the game 92 AHDI dates this usage to the late 19th century 93 An alternate meaning to cooperate is not explicitly connected to baseball by ADHI but is so derived by the Cambridge Dictionary of American Idioms 94 Eight U S attorneys who did not play ball with the political agenda of this administration were dropped from the team said Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois 95 play softball Edit To ask easy questions Perhaps the opposite of playing hardball baseball or throwing difficult or probing questions at a respondent in a pickle Edit To be caught in a tough spot See rundown R Editrain check rain cheque Edit See also Rain check baseball A rain check at CVS shown below the empty shelf for the sold out item This rain check never expires as opposed to the original sale 96 A ticket given to a spectator at an outdoor event providing for admission at a later date in lieu of a refund of entrance money should the event be interrupted by rain an assurance of a deferred extension of an offer especially an assurance that a customer can take advantage of a sale later if the item or service offered is not available as by being sold out or a sometimes vague promise to accept a social offer at an unnamed later date The latter two meanings derive from the first which dates at least to 1877 97 98 99 see rain check baseball and metaphorical usage dates to at least 1896 see rain check To deal with frustration among holiday shoppers hunting for its Wii game console Nintendo Co and retailer GameStop Corp are launching a rain check program Tribune wires Chicago Tribune 19 December 2007 100 Another scheduled member of the party Pat McKenna White House doorkeeper for thirty five years was prevented from making the trip due to an illness in his immediate family but the President said at his press conference today that he had given McKenna a rain check on the next cruise Roosevelt starts for ocean cruise The New York Times April 30 1938 101 rally cap Edit In baseball a rally cap is a baseball cap worn while inside out and or backwards or in another unconventional manner by players or fans in order to will a team into a come from behind rally late in the game The rally cap is primarily a baseball superstition The term may also be used by other groups such as stock market traders headline Muni Market Traders Keep Their Rally Caps On Patrick McGee The Bond Buyer 15 April 2011 102 relief pitcher Edit In baseball a relief pitcher comes in as a replacement for the starting pitcher or another relief pitcher A relief pitcher in other realms of activity also comes in as a substitute or replacement for the initial or regular occupant of a role Vincent B Orange doesn t see himself as an opportunist Rather he s more of a relief pitcher with the chops to push the District s business goals he said after council member Harry Thomas Jr relinquished control of the Committee on Economic Development while he fights a lawsuit accusing him of taking public funds for personal use The Washington Times 9 June 2011 103 rhubarb Edit A heated argument or noisy dispute especially between players on a playing field Originally the word traditionally muttered by actors in a play to provide background noise Online Etymology Dictionary attributes the loud squabble on the field usage to broadcaster Garry Schumacher in 1938 104 while OED and CDS both credit sportscaster Red Barber at a baseball game in 1943 OED s first non baseball cite is 1949 105 If the theater people won their point it was not much of a point to win The entire rhubarb after all was about nothing but money Time 7 June 1963 106 right off the bat Edit Immediately without any delay The Oxford English Dictionary dates this term to 1914 in Maclean s a Canadian magazine An older term hot from the bat dates to the 1888 play Meisterschaft by Mark Twain 107 It was very clear right off the bat that the loss of Cdk5 made them have a much stronger associative memory Professor Bibb said Reuters The New York Times 29 May 2007 108 S Edit Say it ain t so Joe Edit An expression of disbelief A reference to the Black Sox scandal of 1919 when several members of the Chicago White Sox conspired with gamblers to lose the World Series on purpose When Shoeless Joe Jackson was implicated in the scandal an apocryphal story says that a young fan approached him and said Say it ain t so Joe screwball Edit Eccentric zany or crazy OED dates this usage to 1933 109 The screwball is a rarely used pitch because of its effect on the arm that is intended to behave erratically it breaks in the opposite direction a curveball would break And now as we enter not only the best season for stocks in the calendar year but also the very best three quarters in the four year election cycle you d think you should just sit back and enjoy the ride right But I m worried the market may be getting ready to throw us a screwball MarketWatch 16 October 2010 110 shutout Edit See pitch a shutout singles or hit singles Edit To seek modest or step by step gains instead of large ones In baseball hitting singles or playing small ball instead of seeking to hit home runs is sometimes a good strategy for teams that do not have many power hitters With the duration of bonds tailwind on the wane investors must literally scour the globe for opportunities seeking coins and jewels rather than treasure chests In baseball vernacular investors must now aim to hit singles rather than swinging for the fences Anthony J Crescenzi Morningstar com 22 December 2010 111 small ball Edit In modern baseball play and analysis sabermetrics small ball refers to a strategy that focuses on gaining a small or step by step edge on the opponent not by trying to knock the ball out of the ballpark but instead by getting singles stealing bases and moving runners along one base at a time In other endeavors a similar focus on the details winning a few points at a time rather than trying for large gains may also be described as small ball headline The president plays small ball Charles Krauthammer The Washington Post 26 January 2012 112 headline In Need of a Game Change Santorum Plays Small Ball Nate Silver The New York Times 17 March 2012 113 softball Edit See play softball step up to the plate Edit Often shortened to step up To rise to an occasion in life Refers to when a player must approach home plate to take a turn at batting OED cites baseball usage in 1875 general usage in 1919 114 headline First Responders Stepped Up to the Plate 115 headline Pig Farmers Have Stepped Up to the Plate 116 strike Edit As in strike out three strikes you re out a strike against you he was born with two strikes against him In baseball a strike is when the batter swings at and misses a pitch or when a pitch crosses the strike zone without the batter swinging A batter with three strikes is out and must stop batting The word strike has crept into common English usage to mean a failure shortcoming or loss When a person has gotten three strikes and struck out they have failed completely The three strikes laws refer to more severe punishments for criminals with a third conviction Someone seeking romance with another person may strike out and fail to impress on a first meeting Also A swing and a miss headline Everybody Struck Out in Marietta Teen Drinking Incident Atlanta Journal and Constitution 25 February 2010 117 Having two strikes against you means that you have just one remaining chance to succeed at something or that you are given little chance to succeed perhaps because you have been prejudged The British bank Barclays has announced its next CEO But Bob Diamond already seemingly has two strikes against him going in One thing he s an American And number two he s head of the company s investment banking arm American Public Media Marketplace 7 September 2010 118 strike out swinging Edit To fail while giving it your best effort strike out looking Edit To fail by being passive without even making an effort swing and miss EditTo try but fail like swinging a bat and missing the ball Also see whiff I ve swung and missed a lot in my hunt for vintage Levis 119 Referring to the disappointing purchase of a living room couch Todd Hey batter hey batter sometimes when you re looking for the rainbow curve away you get the heater down the middle Maybe that s why you swung and missed 120 The 1988 2000 employment projections how accurate were they In the late 1980s we projected future employment in scores of occupations for the 1988 2000 period That future is now the past See where we scored a hit landed in the ballpark and now and then swung and missed 121 swing for the fences Edit To try for a substantial gain to make a big score In baseball to swing for the fences is to try to hit a home run rather than trying to hit singles or play small ball These are opportunities that traders look for every day That many of them noticed it and swung for the fences all at once is not collusion it s just the sign of a huge softball coming right down the line 122 switch hitter Edit Refers to baseball players who are capable of hitting as a left handed or right handed batter OED 1948 123 Colloquially a switch hitter 124 is a bisexual More broadly switch hitting can refer to an ability to perform double functions or roles An article titled Hatteras Plans Switch Hitting Ethernet discusses a network switch that can operate either on fiber optic or copper wiring 125 T Edittake cuts at someone Edit In baseball a batter swinging the bat at a ball is sometimes said to take cuts at the ball A person who takes cuts at somebody else may be taking a verbal swing or striking a blow at the person s reputation headline Ex teammates take cuts at A Rod 126 headline Opponents Sure to Take Cuts at Stadium Votes in Anaheim Political Game 127 three strikes law Edit See Strike took the collar Edit From the phrase for failing to get any hits it can be used to indicate failure at something Referring to the competition between two newspapers the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News The News you recall took the collar as the failing newspaper when the two sought Justice Department approval in 2000 to merge their business operations 128 touch base s Edit As in we will touch base s at the meeting To make contact with someone to inform someone of one s plans or activities perhaps in anticipation of an event In baseball a player who is touching a base is not in danger of being put out Another explanation is that a player must briefly touch each of the bases in order after hitting a home run It may also refer to the fact that after a fly ball has been caught for an out a runner on base who has taken a lead or is standing off his base towards the next base must go back to touch or tag that base tag up before he can advance to the next one Trevor it s been a while I d like to touch bases with you next week to discuss our quarterly sales targets triple play Edit In baseball a triple play is the rare act of making three outs during the same continuous play The OED attributes the original usage of triple play to the American game of baseball as early as 1869 129 headline President Obama s Wednesday NYC Triple Play Celeste Katz New York Daily News 26 April 2011 130 lede on same story Brace yourself New York City President Obama is returning tomorrow for his third visit in less than a month bringing the increasingly familiar swirl of traffic and buckraking that surrounds presidential campaigns headline Cosmic Triple Play Asteroid Flyby Fireball over Utah Meteor Shower Charles Q Choi SPACE com 18 November 2009 131 W Editwheelhouse Edit From the term for a batter s power zone usually waist high and over the middle of the plate Etymology attributed to Peter Tamony who suggested that batters wheel at the ball and take good level roundhouse swings 132 133 Carville also said he had not spoken with Hillary Clinton about Richardson s endorsement but that he was outraged I doubt if Gov Richardson and I will be terribly close in the future he said but I ve had my say I got one in the wheelhouse and I tagged him 134 whiff Edit In general usage the word whiff may refer to the movement or sound of air or wind perhaps as an object moves through it In baseball a whiff is when a batter swings and misses a pitch Such usage in baseball is attributed by the OED to 1913 Perhaps derived from this the term whiff has also come to mean trying and failing at something Also see swing and miss After Richardson whiffed on the question Joe Biden parked it 135 Yahoo and MSN each whiffed on six questions There was only one question that baffled all the search engines 136 whole new ball game Edit Also brand new ball game whole nother ball game In common usage a whole new ball game or brand new ball game signifies a drastic turn of events a completely altered situation In baseball an announcer says it s a whole new ball game when the trailing team ties the score or takes the lead usually after being behind by several runs AHDI traces this to the 1960s 137 A whole nother ball game signifies something completely unrelated different or irrelevant Also said extensively and out of context in the world of selling ads for trade mags Under the headline It s a Whole New Ballgame for Obama it is stated that Barack Obama we all know by now is not an ideologue But where his roots are planted is also nowhere near the progressive pendulum particularly on domestic issues Now he s got a playing field that suits his natural political conservatism Taylor Marsh Huffington Post 7 January 2011 138 In fact on demand applications are a whole nother ballgame which is why personally I try to avoid the popular phrase software as a service SaaS since I feel it s a phrase that s born of the nothing changes mindset Phil Wainewright ZDNet 16 March 2006 139 See also EditBaseball metaphors for sex Glossary of baseball List of sports idiomsReferences Edit 24 Jun 1957 Page 16 The Des Moines Register at Newspapers com Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 03 10 Ballpark Figure Idiom Definition and Origin Theidioms com Largest Idioms Dictionary Retrieved 20 December 2018 Stephen Shankland Intel plans Itanium course correction The New York Times 23 April 2003 Long Island Vines Macari Price 9 5 Million Hillary Resonates with Winning Speech Archived 2008 11 21 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 8 July 2011 AHDI Reed Abelson After a Recall Boston Scientific Tries to Assure Wary Investors New York Times July 27 2004 The Faster Times Archived from the original on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2011 02 25 Steven Luo DEBATE ANALYSIS Brokaw brings heat candidates refuse to swing California Beat 13 October 2010 Archived 2010 11 21 at the Wayback Machine OED James Oestreich New Haven Symphony Orchestra Carnegie Hall The New York Times 25 January 1994 National Real Estate Investor July 1 2005 retrieved September 28 2011 Paul L Hollis Brand new ball game New peanut program brings change Southwest Farm Press March 21 2002 retrieved September 28 2011 AHD4 Archived 2008 04 16 at the Wayback Machine M W etc David Limbaugh Targeting speech codes on campus The Washington Times August 19 2003 Jeffrey Goldberg What if Mitt Romney Were Jewish Bloomberg com June 18 2012 13 Jan 1896 9 St Louis Globe Democrat at Newspapers com Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 03 11 OED Catherine Seipp Afflict the Comfortable Chicks on their Laptops National Review March 24 2005 OED Brave New Soma Time June 8 1959 OED Merrill s cleanup hitter new position focuses on quality of research BNET dead link Brian Lawler Trimeris Gets a Cleanup Hitter The Motley Fool November 16 2007 Clean Up Hitter Techmomind September 3 2004 Archived April 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine closer Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Del Jones Do Foreign Executives Balk at Sports Jargon USA Today March 30 2007 Oxford Advanced Learner s Dictionary Fatal Barn Fire Still A Mystery The New York Times 7 January 1985 J B Miles GCN Government Computer News November 2 2000 retrieved online 22 December 2011 Dictionary com retrieved April 5 2012 Jeff Chu 10 Questions for Meredith Vieira Article at Time 27 August 2006 Greg Bishop Desormeaux 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Whole New Ballgame for Obama Huffington Post 7 January 2011 Phil Wainewright It s a whole nother ball game ZDNet March 16 2006 External links Edit Look up rain check in Wiktionary the free dictionary USA Today article on sports jargon used in business Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glossary of English language idioms derived from baseball amp oldid 1137405319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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