off one's game

      English

      Adjective

      off one's game (not comparable)

      1. (sports, of a competitor) Playing or competing below one's usual level of performance.
        • circa 1910, Ralph Henry Barbour, "The Dub" in The New Boy at Hilltop and Other Stories:
          One fellow I knew once was off his game the whole first half because some idiot was flying a kite over the field advertising some one's pills.
      2. (idiomatic, by extension) Performing in any activity below one's usual level; behaving in an irregular, inept, or awkward manner; feeling unwell.
        • 2008 April 2, Tracy Connor, "'Mellow' shark dies," Daily News (New York) (retrieved 9 Sep. 2008):
          Big Bertha, the crowd-pleasing sand tiger shark who survived an astonishing four decades at the New York Aquarium, has died. "She was off her game. She slowed down. She wasn't quite right," said Hans Walters, the animal department supervisor.

      Adverb

      off one's game (not comparable)

      1. (sports) In or into a condition of competing below a usual level of performance.
        • 1922, P. G. Wodehouse, "A Woman is only a Woman" in The Clicking of Cuthbert:
          Then the latter, as every golfer does at times, suddenly went right off his game.
      2. (idiomatic, by extension) In or into a condition which reflects unaccustomed poor performance or unwellness in an activity or situation.
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      Last modified on 16 June 2013, at 13:37