Who said bouncebackability




















Resiliency is the ability to function really well in the face of adversity. The DLA resilience model has four pillars: mental, physical, social and spiritual; balancing these four components help strengthen your life. Skip to content Technology. March 20, Joe Ford. When Gillingham returned to the final the following year, it looked as if they were in for yet more heartbreak. Having taken an early lead, Gillingham found themselves trailing in extra time and staring a second painful defeat in the face.

Two late goals in the th and th minutes gave them a victory in one of the last games to be staged at the old stadium. While Wembley was being rebuilt, the play-offs finals moved to the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, which was the venue for the next comeback.

This was redemption for Zamora as the previous year he had missed a clear-cut chance, had a goal ruled out for offside and was substituted soon after Palace took the lead. The final was only part of his redemptive story; Zamora also scored the only goal of the game nine years later when QPR beat Derby in the final to win promotion to the Premier League.

Even though Dowie coined the term about Crystal Palace, it is their near neighbours Millwall who have since become the kings of bouncebackability. They are the only club to have achieved this considerable feat twice, securing promotion to the Championship on both occasions: against Swindon in the final and against Bradford in the final.

A couple of characters epitomise the spirit involved in this pair of fightbacks. Tony Craig played for Millwall in all four finals, even captaining the side to victory in ; and Neil Harris played in the first two finals and managed the club in the second two. The onus is now on Exeter City to continue the remarkable trend. Having lost to Blackpool in the League Two final last year, they have the chance to make amends on Monday when they face Coventry City in the same fixture.

Paul Tisdale has been here before with Exeter. His team beat Cambridge United in the Conference National League play-off final in — a year after they lost the same fixture to Morecambe. As the season reaches squeaky bum time, Exeter have a chance to show that bouncebackability is alive and well in the play-offs.

Bouncebackability: a word coined for the play-offs that fits them perfectly. The majority of current usages refer to a team's predicted capacity or lack of it! The term is beginning to cross over into rugby and other team sports, and is also gradually appearing in non-sporting contexts, such as business performance or political commentary, as illustrated by the second citation above. It is also beginning to be used in the more general contexts associated with the original phrasal verb, such as recovery from illness.

So convinced of the need for the term bouncebackability are some members of the English-speaking public that they have launched a variety of online petitions for its inclusion in the Oxford English Dictionary. UK bookies are even offering odds of one to five as to whether bouncebackability will make it into OED , dictionary coverage of the word recently being the subject of some debate in the world of lexicography.

There is a small amount of evidence for the spelling variant bouncebackibility , though this is significantly less common. The word bouncebackability was first coined by ex-footballer Iain Dowie, now manager of Crystal Palace football club, who famously described his team as showing '… great bouncebackability '. The word is, of course, formed from suffixation of the phrasal verb bounce back with -ability , a suffix which is usually used with adjectives ending in 'able' to form nouns which indicate a particular quality, such as dependable — dependability , suitable — suitability.



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