Election coverage expression "state XXX is in play"
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Election coverage expression "state XXX is in play"

 
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T. Z.
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Posted: Thu Nov 11, 2004 8:51 pm    Post subject: Election coverage expression "state XXX is in play" Reply with quote

Quote:

Election In Play, From Pres. Race To Senate

By Eddie Pells, Associated Press Writer
Nov 2, 2004 1:23 pm US/Mountain
DENVER (AP) The Republican-leaning state of Colorado
was very much in play Tuesday, with some polls showing
Democrat John Kerry within range of President Bush and
the race for an open Senate seat expected to come down
to just a few percentage points.
<<<


I swear I never heard this expression "So, the state
of xxx is still very much in play" 4 years ago.

(Is this expression originally from golf or soccer?)

How the quotes are used throughout the following
article (they are not sarcastic/ironic quotes) also
suggests that this use is new.

______________________________


Arizona acts not like state 'in play'
Robert Robb
The Arizona Republic
Nov. 9, 2004 09:32 AM

Postscript thoughts about the Arizona election:
• Tell me again the one about Arizona being "in play"
in the presidential race.

In 2000, George W. Bush took the state by the
registration margin Republicans then had over
Democrats, about 5 percent.

In 2004, although both parties had lost registration
share to independents, Republicans still maintained
about a 5 percent advantage over Democrats. Yet Bush
carried the state by twice the registration
differential, or 10 percent.

According to the Arizona exit poll, 14 percent more
self-described Republicans turned out to vote than
Democrats.

Those aren't the characteristics of a state "in play."





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Ben Zimmer
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Posted: Thu Nov 11, 2004 10:08 pm    Post subject: Re: Election coverage expression "state XXX is in play" Reply with quote

"T. Z." wrote:
Quote:


Election In Play, From Pres. Race To Senate
By Eddie Pells, Associated Press Writer
Nov 2, 2004 1:23 pm US/Mountain
DENVER (AP) The Republican-leaning state of Colorado
was very much in play Tuesday, with some polls showing
Democrat John Kerry within range of President Bush and
the race for an open Senate seat expected to come down
to just a few percentage points.



I swear I never heard this expression "So, the state
of xxx is still very much in play" 4 years ago.

(Is this expression originally from golf or soccer?)

Why not baseball, (US) football, basketball, or any other sport where a
ball or similar object can be said to be "in play" (i.e., "in condition
or position to be legitimately played" as MWCD defines the phrase)?

Quote:
How the quotes are used throughout the following
article (they are not sarcastic/ironic quotes) also
suggests that this use is new.
[snip]


A Nexis search suggests that the expression was popularized in the 1988
presidential race:

Washington Post
November 7, 1988
"There are still plenty of states in play that get us
to 270 if we continue moving the way we have the last
48 hours," Sasso said.

Washington Post
November 7, 1988
A View From New Jersey
By Michael Barone
Why do Americans keep electing Republican presidents
and Democratic congresses? For clues I went to New
Jersey, one of the few big states that is in play in
the presidential race ...

The Toronto Star
November 9, 1988
"Missouri could make the difference in this campaign,"
Dukakis said in one interview. "We're still in play ...
Your vote counts."
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