Cinderella (sports)

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In United States sports, a Cinderella refers to a team or player who advances much further in a tournament than expected. Cinderellas tend to gain much media and fan attention as they move closer to the championship game at the end of the tournament. The term comes from the end of the fairy tale Cinderella, and its idea is that one can unexpectedly achieve success after a period of obscurity.

In the United Kingdom, by contrast, a Cinderella team is one which usually underachieves (for example the Spanish football team), or is overshadowed by more successful neighbours (for example, Tranmere Rovers by Liverpool and Everton). This refers to the early part of the Cinderella fairy tale, where the heroine is downtrodden. A U.S.-style Cinderella team would be a surprise package or surprise packet, and their success would be termed a fairy-tale run.

A related concept is the giant-killer, which refers to a lesser competitor who defeats a favorite. The name reflects such stories as David and Goliath, and Jack the Giant-Killer.

Recent Examples of (North America-style) "Cinderellas"

Ice hockey

American football

College Football

Basketball

College Basketball

NBA

Baseball

Major League Baseball

College baseball

Cricket

Cricket World Cup

  • Kenya (2003; first non-Test nation ever to advance to semifinals)

Football (soccer)

FIFA World Cup

European Championship

European Cup / UEFA Champions League

FA Cup

Tennis

Short track speed skating

References

See also