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Grand Slam

(Redirected from Grand slam)

Grand Slam is a general sports term applied when achieving something special.

Most common uses:

See also: Rugby Union Six Nations Championship, Triple Crown, Wooden Spoon
  • In golf, the modern Grand Slam is winning the following four tournaments in the same year: The Masters, US Open, The Open Championship, PGA Championship. (Before the founding of The Masters and the ascension of the PGA Championship, the U.S. and British Amateurs were considered part of the four majors.)
  • In baseball, a grand slam is a home run with all the bases occupied, thereby scoring 4 runs, which is the most possible on one swing of the bat. The baseball usage is thought to have been coined by comparison to the term in bridge.
  • In bridge, it is bidding for and winning all the tricks in one hand.
  • In snooker, winning the Grand Slam is holding the following 8 titles at the same time: LG Cup, British Open, UK Championships, Irish Masters, Welsh Open, European Open, Players Championships and Embassy World Championship (Sheffield)
  • In ski jumping, winning the Grand Slam is winning the Four Hills Tournament. These 4 tournaments are held in Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen (both in Germany), Innsbruck and Bischofshofen (both in Austria).
  • In professional wrestling, especially World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), a Grand Slam winner will be an athelete who had won every single title/championship that is available to him or her (meaning that a wrestler has to win every single championship in any category that he qualified in, in order to be a Grand Slam holder). Past Grand Slam winners in the WWE include Shawn Michaels, Triple H, Chris Jericho, etc.

Other meanings:








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