go to the mats
English
editVerb
editgo to the mats (third-person singular simple present goes to the mats, present participle going to the mats, simple past went to the mats, past participle gone to the mats)
- Alternative form of go to the mat
- 2016 March 9, Chris Dagenais, “THE DISH: Ambitious meal well executed at Salmon House on the Hill”, in North Shore News[1], archived from the original on 2023-01-05:
- I think this omission is largely due to my perception of the place as a view restaurant, a spot less interested in turning out creative and interesting food than filling a south-facing, window-lined room with patrons who will go to the mats for a coveted table with an unobstructed perspective on the glimmering lights of the Lions Gate Bridge, fading to black at its far end as it enters the tree-cloaked causeway of Stanley Park.
- 2018 January 22, Julie Pace, “Shutdown puts spotlight on Democratic leader Schumer”, in The Times of Israel[2], archived from the original on 2020-11-09:
- "He went to the mats," said Frank Sharry, the executive director of the immigration advocacy group America's Voice. "He had the backbone to lead his caucus into a high-stakes, high risk battle. It thrilled progressives. But if the shutdown ends because Democrats blink first, the era of good feeling quickly will be replaced by anger and disappointment."
- 2022 February 3, Colby Hall, “Jake Tapper Blamed Chris Cuomo for Zucker Ouster in Tense Meeting With Warner Boss Jason Kilar: 'The Bad Guy is Winning'”, in Mediaite[3], archived from the original on 2022-12-27:
- A legal battle over outstanding payments has followed — Chris Cuomo wants the $18 million that remains on his contract, and CNN doesn't want to give it to him — and Mediaite has learned from sources close to the story that he is "going to the mats" to get what he feels is due justice.