Win for the underdog
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 22 answers to crossword clue "Win for the underdog"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
UPSETWin for the underdog
UPSETWin by the underdog
GIPPER"Win one for the ...!"
GIPPER"Win one for the ..."
OUTTROTWin the Hambletonian, for instance.
GIPPER"Win one for the ..": Reagan
ONEFORTHEGIPPER" . . . win ..." (exhortation for the Fighting Irish)
TALONIt can win one for the gripper
MAYSSpark for the Giants' 1951 pennant win
BREAKPOINTChance for a win on the court
SHAWSecond Irishman to win the Nobel Prize for literature
SHREKFirst film to win the Oscar for Best Animated Feature
HALLEBERRYFirst African-American to win the Oscar for Best Actress
ASNEROnly actor to win a comedy and drama Emmy for the same character
BYRD"With ... at the South Pole," first documentary to win an Oscar (for cinematography)
SILVERSTAR2005 award for Leigh Ann Hester, the first woman to win it since WWII
sacrificeA move intended to allow the opponent to win a pawn or piece, for strategic or tactical reasons
OBIE10-year-old Sydney Lucas, for her 2013-2014 role in "Fun Home," became the youngest performer ever to win one
napoleona. game in which the players bid for the privilege of naming the trump, stating the number of tricks they propose to win b. bid in this game to take all five tricks of a hand
exchangeA move or short sequence of moves in which both players capture material of comparable value, or particularly (the exchange) in which one captures a rook in return for a knight or bishop (and is said to win the exchange)
meanersto have in the mind as a purpose intend she means to win sometimes used interjectionally with I, chiefly in informal speech for emphasis he throws, I mean, hard or to introduce a phrase restating the point of a preceding phrase we try to answer what we can, but I mean we're not God Bobbie Ann Mason
meanto have in the mind as a purpose intend she means to win sometimes used interjectionally with I, chiefly in informal speech for emphasis he throws, I mean, hard or to introduce a phrase restating the point of a preceding phrase we try to answer what we can, but I mean we're not God Bobbie Ann Mason