Whitewash (sport)

A whitewash is an informal term in sport describing a game or series in which the losing person or team fails to score.

A whitewash may be in a single game where the loser fails to score any points or goals, or in a series where the loser fails to win a game. In the United States, the former is more usually called a shutout.

It is not typically used for certain games such as association football or baseball, where a failure to score is very common; in football the winning team's goalkeeper is said to keep a clean sheet if they do not concede a goal, while in baseball the winner pitches a shutout.

Cricket

In cricket, Whitewash is a term that is used when a team wins all the matches played in a series of at least 2 matches.

Rugby union

The term whitewash is also used in rugby union when one team loses every single match in a particular series. The team that comes last in the Six Nations Championship has the ignominy of being awarded the Wooden Spoon, even if they have not suffered a complete whitewash.

Tennis

In ATP and WTA tennis, the term whitewash is used when a player fails to win a game in a match (6-0, 6-0, 6-0 or 6-0, 6-0). In other words, it is called a triple or double-bagel respectively. Double bagels are more common in tennis.

References

  1. "Blackwash". I love Jamaica. BBC. Retrieved 19 February 2014.
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