kickout
Etymology
Deverbal from kick out.
kickout means A rapid turn performed by shifting one's weight to the rear of the surfboard. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 89 out of 100.
noun
- A rapid turn performed by shifting one's weight to the rear of the surfboard.
- A pass to another offensive player who immediately shoots for the basket.“On his first return scoring, against the Oilers, J.T. said, “I saw a hole on the right side, got a good kickout block and shot through.””
- A kick made by the goalkeeper from the goal area.“This is the style of kick made by goal keepers in soccer in a kickout and by players in the Rugby type of game in the kick-off .”
- A drop kick by a player on the side to return the ball back into play.“In the great Michigan game of 1903, it was he who got the ball on the kickout.”
- A penalty for holding or sinking the driver“Juliet Lawrence led the Crushers in Monday's neck-and-neck loss with 3 goals and had 3 steals and a caused kickout.”
- A hole in the playfield that briefly captures the ball and then ejects it.“We're supposed to be testing them, probing for valuable information, learning that this particular kickout always feeds the ball to the left flipper, that tilt bob is set tight, and this game is sloped so steeply that the right ramp is hard to hit.”