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English Idioms about "Sports"

Buzzer beater

English Idiom

Meaning: A last-minute effort or action that occurs just before a deadline or critical moment. It often refers to a decisive, game-changing move made in the nick of time.
Origin: The term 'buzzer beater' originates from basketball, where it describes a shot taken just before the game clock expires, often signaled by a buzzer. Over time, it has transcended sports and is now used metaphorically to describe any last-minute effort or action that achieves success just in time.
Stressed businesswoman surrounded by shouting colleagues in an office with a clock showing the time approaching deadline
OpenAI's DALL-E generated image

Examples

  • The startup secured its funding with a buzzer beater pitch to the investors just before the deadline.
  • After hours of negotiations, the peace treaty was signed in a buzzer beater move to avoid further conflict.
  • Her acceptance of the job offer was a buzzer beater, coming just moments before the company's hiring deadline.
  • In a buzzer beater decision, the board approved the merger minutes before the market closed.
  • His last-second goal in the soccer match was a true buzzer beater, securing the team's place in the finals.
  • The project team delivered the final report in a buzzer beater effort, completing it just before the client meeting.
  • She managed to submit her thesis with a buzzer beater, uploading it seconds before the deadline.
  • The movie's plot twist was a buzzer beater, revealing the true villain in the final moments of the film.
  • In a buzzer beater rescue, the firefighters saved the family from the burning building just in time.
  • The author's manuscript was a buzzer beater, sent to the publisher mere minutes before the cutoff.