English edit

Alternative forms edit

Noun edit

kick-to-kick (plural kick-to-kicks)

  1. (Australian rules football) An activity in which two or more people kick a football between each other.
    • 2011, Ken Piesse, Football Legends of the Bush: Local Heroes and Big Leaguers, Penguin Group Australia, →ISBN:
      Carey learnt to slide and mark in the wet playing kick-to-kick with his brother, Dick, back home in Wagga.
    • 2012, Richard Yaxley, The Musician and the Murderer, Booktango, →ISBN:
      They played kick-to-kick, which was good except Lewis couldn't kick the ball very well so they had to stand close.
    • 2016, Brent Harvey, Boomer, Macmillan Publishers Aus., →ISBN:
      I'd been to the 'G' before to watch AFL games and had played kick-to-kick on the surface with my mates after the final siren, but this was a special day because we'd been asked to do a lap of honour.
    • 2020 February 4, Hamish Geale, “Hawks 'absolutely' want to stay in Tassie: Shiels”, in The Examiner[1], archived from the original on 2 September 2020:
      In between kick-to-kicks and turning snags at the Hawks' Riverbend Park family function on Tuesday, Shiels spoke in no uncertain terms about whether he'd like to see a new deal struck.