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Football Language: To blow a lead
Publisher |
languagecaster.com
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Education
Language Learning
Sports
Publication Date |
Apr 05, 2021
Episode Duration |
00:03:43

Football Language: To blow a lead - Much like the phrase 'to blow a chance' which means to miss an easy chance, to blow a lead is to lose...

The post Football Language: To blow a lead appeared first on Learn English Through Football.

This post explains the football term ‘to blow a lead’. Find out more about this phrase by reading the transcript below. You can also find many more examples of soccer vocabulary by going to our football cliches page here and our huge football glossary here. To blow a lead DF: Hello everyone, this is Damian from the Learning English Through Football team. I hope we are all doing well and that we are safe wherever we are in the world. Now on this short football language podcast we take a look at the phrase ‘to blow a lead‘ which means to give up or lose a lead. Stinger: You are listening to languagecaster.com (in Thai). DF: Yes, you are listening to languagecaster.com and that message was in Thai. Don’t forget that there’s a transcript to this podcast which you can access by coming along to our site. And you can also follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or you can drop us a line at: admin@languagecaster.com. Right, let’s take a look at the phrase ‘to blow a lead‘. Imagine that your team is playing very well in a match and is winning by two or more goals. Then suddenly the opposing team scores a goal and the dynamic of the game changes. Now your team are edgy or nervous and the opposition are full of confidence and then right at the end they equalise. How did that happen? Your team were much better for most of the game but they ended up blowing the lead – giving the lead away – they were winning by two goals but finished drawing 2-2 – they blew a two-goal lead. In fact there is a cliche in football about losing a two-goal lead – ‘2-0 is the most dangerous scoreline‘ – even though statistically this is not true! Anyway, much like the phrase ‘to blow a chance‘, which means to miss an easy chance, to blow a lead is to lose a lead in a game when your team really should not have done so. Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'4-OIkt_cQYdaeo1fnlaKUw',sig:'6Btc-_pDqMw1jR1fGmqfG-cdDbO_MaZcHYwuwJ2sk2Q=',w:'594px',h:'396px',items:'1229152405',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); In the 2020-21 Premier League season, my favourite team Tottenham have managed to blow a lead in many matches, in fact they have dropped 15 points from winning positions which is the most of any club and many of these games were against teams in the lower third of the league. Here’s an example headline from CBS Sports.com (Oct 18 2020): ‘Tottenham blow three-goal lead in final minutes vs. West Ham as Lanzini scores stunning equalizer‘. * Example: ‘Kane scores as Tottenham blow lead to draw at home vs. Fulham’ (

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