; :
Boxing: to be saved from misfortune or unpleasantness by a timely interruption. Alludes to a boxer who is knocked to the canvas, and must regain his feet before a count of ten or lose the contest; if the bell signalling the end of the round is rung before the count is finished, the fighter now has until the start of the next round to recover and resume fighting. ADHI dates this to the "mid-1900s"; OED cites first boxing use in 1932, figurative use in 1959. ;score an own goal :
Association football: To do something that has the unintended effect of harming your own interests. Relates to the act of scoring a goal for the opposition in association football, usually unintentionally. ;sideline; on/from the sidelines :
Sports: To remove from participation. A player who it is injured, benched, etc. is removed from play and forced to sit
on or observe
from the sidelines. The sidelines themselves are the
lines on the
side of the playing field which define the playing area from that of spectators, non-playing team members, etc. OED defines
sidelines in terms of "spec[ifically] Football and other sports", figurative use from 1934. See also
bench. ;
slam dunk, slam-dunk :
Basketball: A forceful, dramatic move, especially against someone. In basketball, it is a forceful shot in which the player jumps to the basket and slams the ball in. OED only cites the basketball definition, and that to 1976; AHDI cites a figurative usage from "about 1980 on". Figurative usage commonly includes the sense of "can't miss", a sure thing. ;slap-happy :
Boxing: Synonym for
punch-drunk, above; also, dizzy with happiness; carefree, casual, thoughtless, irresponsible. The "punch-drunk" meaning OED cites to 1936; the "dizzy" meaning appears two years later. The "carefree…etc" connotation appears in 1937; it appears the evolution of the idiomatic meaning was influenced by the element "happy" over that of "slap". ;sparring partner :
Boxing: A person with whom one routinely argues or enjoys arguing. Refers to a boxer who is hired to practise with another for training purposes. Other phrases such as "sparring match" (for a verbal argument), and even the verb "to spar" (to bandy words), may actually come from
cockfighting. ;spike the football :
Gridiron Football: To celebrate a victory or win, often excessively. It derives from the American Football practice of enthusiastically throwing or
spiking the ball against the ground when a touchdown is scored. ;square off :
Boxing: To assume a fighting stance or attitude. In boxing, the term derives from the square shape of the ring, and the stance fighters assume immediately before the fight commences. AHD derives the figurative use from boxing in a note at the entry
knockout. ;
Sticky wicket :
Cricket: a
metaphor used to describe a difficult circumstance. It originated as a term to describe difficult playing conditions caused by a damp and soft pitch which was rapidly drying. ;Stumped :
Cricket: To be confused or undecided. In cricket, to be out due to the
wicket-keeper disrupting the stumps with the batsman being out of their crease. Batsmen who are out stumped often do not realise immediately what has happened, because they have played at but missed the ball and have their back to the
wicket keeper. ;
sucker punch :
Boxing: An unexpected blow. In boxing, a sucker punch is one delivered unexpectedly. OED dates boxing term to 1947, but does not cite first figurative usage. ;Sunday punch :
Boxing: A destructive blow to an opponent as in "knocked him into next Sunday". In boxing, a Sunday punch is a knockout blow. WordNet refers to it specifically in terms of boxing. OED cites a meaning as a knockout punch to 1929, figurative use to 1944, but does not ascribe it to the sport of boxing directly. ==T==