18 Strange Terms in Sports, Explained
When you chat with your teammates it might sound like you’re speaking another language. Sure, basketball players understand what you mean when you say you “dropped a dime” during your last game, but average folks probably don’t get it. Same thing goes for the soccer players who “nutmegged” their opponents on their way to a goal. To help connect you to the athletes toiling away in other sports, we rounded up 18 of the head-scratchingest terms in sports. Let us know on Twitter if we missed any!
1. Catch a Crab
Sport: Rowing
What It Means: After you remove your oar from the water, you flip it so it’s parallel with the water as you prepare for another stroke. If you fail to remove the oar in time, the blade acts like a brake, and the handle whips back toward you. Violent crabs can actually eject a rower from the boat. Not exactly the kind of crustacean you want to catch.
2. Bonk
Sport: Running
What It Means: When a runner “bonks,” he or she has hit the proverbial wall. When you bonk, you have run out of energy, and each step seems harder than the last. You can expect a runner’s performance to dip significantly after he or she has bonked. Proper pre- and intra-race nutrition can help runners avoid this.
3. Frozen Rope
Sport: Baseball
What It Means: A frozen rope is a hard line drive hit directly to the outfield by the batter. The straight trajectory of the ball resembles the name—”a frozen rope.”
4. Dime
Sport: Basketball
What It Means: A dime is an assist. You might hear basketball players say something along the lines of, “He scored 15 points along with 10 dimes.” Steve Nash thinks that a dime came to be synonymous with an assist due to the use of payphones back in the pre-historic era. If you gave someone a dime, you were giving them an assist to make their call. In the basketball world, it’s a popular enough term to have inspired the title of a basketball-centric magazine: DIME.
5. Spoon
Sport: Lacrosse
What It Means: Slang for a lacrosse stick. It definitely looks like a huge version of the thing you scoop cereal with.
6. Nutmeg
Sport: Soccer
What It Means: A soccer player can “nutmeg” an opponent by kicking the ball between his or her legs, then sprinting around the defender and regaining possession of the ball. It’s an effective move both tactically and emotionally: “nutmeg-ing” your opponent can give you a serious mental edge. There are a few reports about how this term came into use, but the most likely one suggests that it was born from nutmeg exports from America to England in the late 19th century (it’s old, we know). In the trade, sellers would place wooden nuts into sacks along with real nutmegs, tricking the buyers into paying extra for essentially nothing. Nutmegging someone suggests smarts on the side of the seller and stupidity on the side of the buyer.
7. Fartlek
Sport: Running
What It Means: We’ll wait for the giggles to subside before we jump into this one.
Ready?
Fartlek training is a Swedish methodology for runners—it literally means “Speed Play” in Swedish. The athlete sprints at maximum intensity, followed by periods of easy jogging. There are no standard rep or set schemes: athletes must be honest with themselves to see what they can handle and adjust accordingly.
8. Deke (pronounced ‘deek’)
Sport: Hockey
What It Means: A deke is a hockey fake-out, in which the puck-handler uses quick, controlled movements with the puck to get around his or her defender. It’s similar to a basketball player performing a successful crossover. It is allegedly a shortening of the word “decoy,” originating from Canada (would you have expected anywhere else?).
[youtube video=”5ChR9Ehes9c” /]9. Icing
Sport: Football and Basketball
What It Means: Icing occurs when a team calls a timeout right before (in football) the opposing kicker is set to attempt a (usually critical) field goal and (in basketball) right before an opposing player is set to attempt a foul shot. It’s done to psyche the kicker or shooter out, which would theoretically make him or her more likely to miss. The jury is out on whether this actually works.
10. Posterize
Sport: Basketball
What It Means: You might not always realize it, but there is generally another guy on those dunk posters lining the walls of your childhood bedroom. You posterize your opponent when you perform a dunk so emphatic that the moment is put on a poster. Jason Terry can tell you all about it.
[youtube video=”FkxcY45bP2U” /]11. 5-Hole
Sport: Hockey
What It Means: In hockey, the 5-hole is the space between the goalie’s legs. A player can score in the 5-hole by slipping the puck past the goalie’s leg and stick.
12. FOGO
Sport: Lacrosse
What It Means: This is an acronym for “Face Off, Get Off.” A FOGO player is on the field just for the faceoff, after which he or she returns to the bench.
13. Lettuce/Flow
Sport: Lacrosse (Sometimes also heard in hockey)
What It Means: This isn’t a move, but a look: when a lacrosse player wears his hair long and it flows out of the back of his helmet. Loosely referred to as “lettuce” or “flow, it’s an integral part of becoming a “total lax bro, dude.”
14. Ball Don’t Lie
Sport: Basketball
What It Means: “The ball don’t lie, man.” If you feel you were unjustly called for a shooting foul, a missed free throw by the offensive player affirms that you are, in fact, correct. Former NBA player Rasheed Wallace could often be heard shouting the phrase after being called for a shooting foul.
[youtube video=”kkhWeEGyIdI” /]15. Stinger
Sport: Football
What It Means: A stinger occurs when a player tackles, or is tackled, in a way that squeezes a nerve and sends a stinging sensation down the player’s arm. It’s extremely dangerous.
16. Ace
Sport: Tennis
What It Means: An ace is a serve that is not returned, thus granting the server a point without any subsequent volleys.
17. Pepper
Sport: Volleyball
What It Means: Pepper is a popular warm-up among volleyball players. It usually consists of two athletes performing the following sequence of movement: bump, set, spike, repeat.
[youtube video=”uq6gJmlFvtw”” /]18. Deuce
Sport: Tennis
What It Means: A deuce in tennis occurs when the score is tied at 40-40. A player must score twice in a row to win the match, hence the term “deuce.”
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18 Strange Terms in Sports, Explained
When you chat with your teammates it might sound like you’re speaking another language. Sure, basketball players understand what you mean when you say you “dropped a dime” during your last game, but average folks probably don’t get it. Same thing goes for the soccer players who “nutmegged” their opponents on their way to a goal. To help connect you to the athletes toiling away in other sports, we rounded up 18 of the head-scratchingest terms in sports. Let us know on Twitter if we missed any!
1. Catch a Crab
Sport: Rowing
What It Means: After you remove your oar from the water, you flip it so it’s parallel with the water as you prepare for another stroke. If you fail to remove the oar in time, the blade acts like a brake, and the handle whips back toward you. Violent crabs can actually eject a rower from the boat. Not exactly the kind of crustacean you want to catch.
2. Bonk
Sport: Running
What It Means: When a runner “bonks,” he or she has hit the proverbial wall. When you bonk, you have run out of energy, and each step seems harder than the last. You can expect a runner’s performance to dip significantly after he or she has bonked. Proper pre- and intra-race nutrition can help runners avoid this.
3. Frozen Rope
Sport: Baseball
What It Means: A frozen rope is a hard line drive hit directly to the outfield by the batter. The straight trajectory of the ball resembles the name—”a frozen rope.”
4. Dime
Sport: Basketball
What It Means: A dime is an assist. You might hear basketball players say something along the lines of, “He scored 15 points along with 10 dimes.” Steve Nash thinks that a dime came to be synonymous with an assist due to the use of payphones back in the pre-historic era. If you gave someone a dime, you were giving them an assist to make their call. In the basketball world, it’s a popular enough term to have inspired the title of a basketball-centric magazine: DIME.
5. Spoon
Sport: Lacrosse
What It Means: Slang for a lacrosse stick. It definitely looks like a huge version of the thing you scoop cereal with.
6. Nutmeg
Sport: Soccer
What It Means: A soccer player can “nutmeg” an opponent by kicking the ball between his or her legs, then sprinting around the defender and regaining possession of the ball. It’s an effective move both tactically and emotionally: “nutmeg-ing” your opponent can give you a serious mental edge. There are a few reports about how this term came into use, but the most likely one suggests that it was born from nutmeg exports from America to England in the late 19th century (it’s old, we know). In the trade, sellers would place wooden nuts into sacks along with real nutmegs, tricking the buyers into paying extra for essentially nothing. Nutmegging someone suggests smarts on the side of the seller and stupidity on the side of the buyer.
7. Fartlek
Sport: Running
What It Means: We’ll wait for the giggles to subside before we jump into this one.
Ready?
Fartlek training is a Swedish methodology for runners—it literally means “Speed Play” in Swedish. The athlete sprints at maximum intensity, followed by periods of easy jogging. There are no standard rep or set schemes: athletes must be honest with themselves to see what they can handle and adjust accordingly.
8. Deke (pronounced ‘deek’)
Sport: Hockey
What It Means: A deke is a hockey fake-out, in which the puck-handler uses quick, controlled movements with the puck to get around his or her defender. It’s similar to a basketball player performing a successful crossover. It is allegedly a shortening of the word “decoy,” originating from Canada (would you have expected anywhere else?).
[youtube video=”5ChR9Ehes9c” /]9. Icing
Sport: Football and Basketball
What It Means: Icing occurs when a team calls a timeout right before (in football) the opposing kicker is set to attempt a (usually critical) field goal and (in basketball) right before an opposing player is set to attempt a foul shot. It’s done to psyche the kicker or shooter out, which would theoretically make him or her more likely to miss. The jury is out on whether this actually works.
10. Posterize
Sport: Basketball
What It Means: You might not always realize it, but there is generally another guy on those dunk posters lining the walls of your childhood bedroom. You posterize your opponent when you perform a dunk so emphatic that the moment is put on a poster. Jason Terry can tell you all about it.
[youtube video=”FkxcY45bP2U” /]11. 5-Hole
Sport: Hockey
What It Means: In hockey, the 5-hole is the space between the goalie’s legs. A player can score in the 5-hole by slipping the puck past the goalie’s leg and stick.
12. FOGO
Sport: Lacrosse
What It Means: This is an acronym for “Face Off, Get Off.” A FOGO player is on the field just for the faceoff, after which he or she returns to the bench.
13. Lettuce/Flow
Sport: Lacrosse (Sometimes also heard in hockey)
What It Means: This isn’t a move, but a look: when a lacrosse player wears his hair long and it flows out of the back of his helmet. Loosely referred to as “lettuce” or “flow, it’s an integral part of becoming a “total lax bro, dude.”
14. Ball Don’t Lie
Sport: Basketball
What It Means: “The ball don’t lie, man.” If you feel you were unjustly called for a shooting foul, a missed free throw by the offensive player affirms that you are, in fact, correct. Former NBA player Rasheed Wallace could often be heard shouting the phrase after being called for a shooting foul.
[youtube video=”kkhWeEGyIdI” /]15. Stinger
Sport: Football
What It Means: A stinger occurs when a player tackles, or is tackled, in a way that squeezes a nerve and sends a stinging sensation down the player’s arm. It’s extremely dangerous.
16. Ace
Sport: Tennis
What It Means: An ace is a serve that is not returned, thus granting the server a point without any subsequent volleys.
17. Pepper
Sport: Volleyball
What It Means: Pepper is a popular warm-up among volleyball players. It usually consists of two athletes performing the following sequence of movement: bump, set, spike, repeat.
[youtube video=”uq6gJmlFvtw”” /]18. Deuce
Sport: Tennis
What It Means: A deuce in tennis occurs when the score is tied at 40-40. A player must score twice in a row to win the match, hence the term “deuce.”