English

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Etymology

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From Hail Mary, a prayer for intercession, from Latin Ave Maria, plus pass (moving the ball from one player to another). Attested from the 1970s in the context of American football.

Noun

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Hail Mary pass (plural Hail Mary passes)

  1. (American football) A long forward pass with little chance of completion, typically used by the losing team when time is running out and no other play is practical, in a desperate attempt to score the winning points.
    • 1983, “A Run for the Roses”, in Michigan Ensian[1], page 120:
      With 11:04 left in the game, and a comfortable 38–14 lead, Smith heaved a 62-yard, Hail Mary pass to Carter.
    • 1990, Michael Teitelbaum, Play Book! Football, →OCLC, page 35:
      Maybe I should just toss up a “Hail Mary” pass deep into their territory, as though I was saying a prayer that one of our players would catch it.
    • 2024 October 4, John Branch, “What Does College Football Have to Do With College?”, in The New York Times[2], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC:
      The black sky emptied as about 50,000 rain-soaked University of Colorado football fans exhaled in improbable joy at Folsom Field. This was after the Hail Mary pass caught as time expired, after the game-clinching fumble that squirted out of the end zone in overtime.
      (Can we archive this URL?)
  2. (by extension) An act done in desperation, with only a very small chance of success.
    • 2010 September 11, Mark Mazzetti, “As Time Passes, the Goals in Afghanistan Shrink”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN:
      Some liken that offensive to a “Hail Mary” pass, with the Taliban still entrenched throughout southern and eastern Afghanistan and a program to persuade Talib soldiers to lay down arms and be “reintegrated” into Afghan society having achieved little so far.

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See also

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References

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