long game
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit](This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
[edit]long game (plural long games)
- A long-term strategy or endeavor.
- 1917, H. Rider Haggard, chapter 20, in Finished:
- He had won the long game and success had turned to ashes in his mouth.
- 1993 July 19, Todd S. Purdum, “As Campaign Warms, Dinkins Manager Is Cool, Calm and Directed”, in New York Times, retrieved 11 July 2014:
- Mr. Lynch has always preferred the long game and he is banking on luring Democrats home to the Mayor's side in November.
- 2010 August 21, Tony Karon, “Fears May Be Overblown as Iran Reactor Comes Online”, in Time, retrieved 11 July 2014:
- The U.S. and its allies hope to use the leverage of sanctions to persuade Iran to back down. . . . For each side, the long game remains shaping the diplomatic compromise to their own liking.
- 2021 January 22, Lilah Raptopoulos, “My tug-of-war with algorithms”, in Financial Times[1]:
- And when none of it works and I’m down the rabbit hole, it’s fine. This is a long game. I buy the stupid plant and give myself the gift of a break.
- (whist) The version of the game played until one team makes 10 points, as opposed to the short game, which is played to 5 points.
- Chamber's Encyclopedia: “About 1785 the experiment of dividing the game into half was tried, and short whist was the result. The short game soon came into favour; and in 1864 the supremacy of short whist was acknowledged.”
- (American football) The aspect of the game in which the strategy is to advance downfield by throwing the ball to a receiving player; the passing game.
- 2013 September 8, “What we saw: Seahawks 12, at Panthers 7”, in Seattle Post-Intelligencer, retrieved 11 July 2014:
- [T]he Seahawks held Newton to 119 passing yards, as the Panthers kept mainly to the ground and Seattle's secondary shut down the long game.
- (golf) The portion of the game, played with driver clubs, in which the ball is advanced down the fairway to the putting green.
- 2010 July 18, Christopher Clarey, “Another Second for Golf’s Latest Near-Miss Man”, in New York Times, retrieved 11 July 2014:
- “[E]verybody thinks when the wind blows it affects the long game the most, but it doesn’t,” Westwood said. “It tends to affect the putting most.”
Usage notes
[edit]- One who follows a long-term strategy is said to "play the long game".
See also
[edit]- take the long view
- (sports) long ball