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rookie
[ rook-ee ]
noun
- an athlete playing their first season as a member of a professional sports team:
The rookie replaced the injured regular at first base.
- a raw recruit, as in the army or on a police force.
- a novice; tyro.
rookie
/ Ë°ùÊ°ìÉȘ /
noun
- informal.an inexperienced person or newcomer, esp a raw recruit in the army
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of rookie1
Example Sentences
They have also given a two-year rookie deal to Rocky Flintoff's elder brother, Corey, who played for Lancashire's second XI last summer.
The Rams were scheduled to meet Tuesday with running back Kyren Williamsâ agent, Drew Rosenhaus, regarding a possible extension for a player entering the final year of his rookie contract.
Last year, the Rams were in a similar situation with linebacker Ernest Jones IV, who started for a Super Bowl-champion team as a rookie and ascended to team captain.
The Vikings let Darnold go and with McCarthy being on a rookie contract, they have spent big on bolstering their offensive line.
Center fielder Julio RodrĂguez has seen his wins above replacement decline two years in a row after his rookie of the year splash in 2022, but at 24, he easily could rebound.
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About This yĐÄvlog
What does Rookie of the Year mean?
Rookie of the Year is an award given to an athlete judged most accomplished in the first season of their sport.
Where did the word rookie come from?
The word rookie is no newcomer to the English language. The term is recorded as early as the 1860s for a ânew recruitâ to the military or a police force. Some think it was the very word recruit that was shortened into rookie. Others see influence in an old verb rook, âto cheatâ someone, supposedly alluding to how old-timers can easily trick gullible noobs.
Whatever its exact origins, rookie took the field in the early 1900s, when the term referred to ânew members of a sports teams,â particularly professionals. (Itâs around this same time rookie started naming any âbeginner.â) Early in its career, rookie saw special use in baseball, Americaâs great pastime and apparent progenitor of Rookie of the Year as a phrase and praise.
Who was the first Rookie of the Year?
A 1921 feature in the sports pages of Floridaâs The Pensacola Journal christened Riggs Stephensonâa 23-year-old in his first year playing second base for Cleveland Indiansâas a âmost remarkable rookie of the year.â Baseball wouldnât formally honor any sluggers as Rookie of the Year until the 1940s though.
That year, the Chicago chapter of the Baseball Writersâ Association of America (BBWAA) presented its own Rookie of the Year prize and did so until 1947, when it ceded to the BBWAAâs national award, officially recognized by Major League Baseball (MLB). Its first honoree was Brooklyn Dodgersâ #42, Jackie Robinson, a legend inside the ballpark and out for breaking baseballâs color barrier. The MLB named its Rookie of the Year award the Jackie Robinson Award in his honor in 1987.
Basketball wasnât far behind ⊠courtside sportswriters named a pro basketball player Rookie of the Year starting in the 1947â1948 season before the National Basketball Association (NBA) inaugurated its official award in 1952â53 season. Called the Eddie Gottlieb Trophy (whose namesake was the rookie coach for the Philadelphia Warriors), the NBA Rookie of the Year has crowned some of the giants of the game, including Wilt Chamberlain, Michael Jordan, and LeBron James.
Other sports variously award Rookie of the Year awards including Major League Soccer, NASCAR, the National Football League, the National Hockey League, and Womenâs Professional Soccer. In many cases, including for the MLB and NBA, a Rookie of the Year is chosen based on total points as awarded by sportswriters and sportscasters who cover the sport.
Different fields also give out Rookie of the Year awards, notably including the Korean Music Awards, whose Rookie of the Year has been lauding best new artists in South Korea since 2004. Since 2011, the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue has named a first-time swimsuit model Rookie of the Year, with Ashley Graham making news as the magazineâs first plus-size model to appear in the pages as its 2016 Rookie of the Year.
What are famous uses of the term Rookie of the Year?
In the 2017â18 NBA season, the two leading nominees, the Philadelphia 76ersâ Ben Simmons and Utah Jazzâs Donovan âSpidaâ Mitchell, jawed over the very definition of rookie. Mitchell playfully trash-talked Simmons by claiming his competitor was not a true rookie, as an injury benched Simmons during what was technically his first season in 2016. Spida, ever the acrobat on the hardwood, showed off his reference skills when he sported an Adidas hoodie boasting our Dictionary.com definition of rookie. The experts countered that, while 2017â18 was technically the second season for Simmons, he still qualified as a rookie because he didnât play a single second of the shot clock that year.
Donovan Mitchellâs hoodie though lmao đ
â Complex Sports (@ComplexSports)
Rookie of the Year has also captured the popular imagination, such as in the 1993 feel-good film Rookie of the Year, following a Little Leaguerâs (Thomas Ian Nicholas) foray into the big leagues, based on the 1952 Roogieâs Bump. North Carolina-based indie rockers took Rookie of the Year as their band-name when they formed in 2002.
How to use the term Rookie of the Year
Rookie of the Year Winner can name a specific winner or the contest in general. Itâs most often used in the context of various annual sports awards, from the amateur to professional. Since at least the late 2000s, Rookie of the Year has been abbreviated as ROTY or â#ROTYâ on social media.
2017 Rookie of the Year holds the Indianapolis 500 records for the driver to complete the fastest first 100 miles (40 laps) at 214.828 MPH and 125 miles (50 laps) and 215.990 MPH.
â Indy 500 History (@Indy500History)
However, other disciplines and institutions like to name Rookies of the Year to distinguish first-year students, employees, or other novices and celebrate their achievements.
EMPLOYEE FEATURE WEDNESDAY: Today we feature Brian âB Smoothâ Smith, our 2017 Rookie of the Year and one of the consistent names on our leader board. Brian has been with IEL for 1.5 years and enjoys building lasting relationships with his customers.
â iel_llc (@IEL_LLC)
More loosely, people may refer to any beginner that is distinguished as a Rookie of the Year, as Joelle James so sings about a newly famous lover in her 2017 track âRookie of the Yearâ with Chris Brown: âYouâre my rookie of the year / All the odds are on you.â
More examples of Rookie of the Year:
âJust ask Jazmine Reeves, 2014 Rookie of the Year for the NWSLâs Boston Breakers, who told The Atlantic she left professional soccer because she was unable to get by on her $11,000 salary.â
âAlicia Lorene Johnson, Bustle, June 2015
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the termâs history, meaning, and usage.
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