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11 Sentences With "lowest scoring player"

How to use lowest scoring player in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lowest scoring player" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lowest scoring player". Mastering all the usages of "lowest scoring player" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The lowest scoring player will also get $500 in this case.
Three male contestants competed against "The Schwab" in a series of three rounds, with the lowest-scoring player being eliminated after each round.
In 1960, he was the lowest-scoring player (for the International Trophy) at Portmarnock in Ireland, from a field that included some of the sports all-time greats, such as Sam Snead, Arnold Palmer, Bobby Locke, Gary Player and Kel Nagle.
The three remaining contestants had their scores reset to zero, and the process was repeated with another Jumble. The lowest scoring player after this round was eliminated. In the final round, the two remaining contestants' scores were reset to zero once again. The contestant with the highest score after the final Jumble was declared the day's winner.
After this, Wink would mention which items were ordered third and fourth, and a new list would be played. Three lists are played this way, and the player with the lowest score at the end of three lists would be eliminated. In the second round, the three remaining players had their scores reset to zero. Three more lists would be played, and the lowest scoring player would be eliminated.
After all three grades had been played, the lowest-scoring player was "expelled" from the game and went home with the complete 2002 set of the World Book Encyclopedia as a consolation prize; a second-place tie was broken via a buzz-in tiebreaker question. The first player to give a correct answer in this round won a $200 bonus prize, either as a gift certificate for Domino's Pizza or as quarters ostensibly for "washing machines".
Raise the Roof was one of the first game shows to exploit the lifting of the Independent Television Commission's prize limits, by giving away a large, valuable house as the star prize. The format featured several rounds of questions which progressively whittled the contestant pool from six to one. The final round offered the house as the grand prize. Eliminated contestants kept whatever money they earned; in addition, the lowest-scoring player in each round also received "Bob's Bungalow" - a cottage-shaped teapot.
Joachim Brandt Hansen (born 18 August 1990) is a Danish professional golfer who currently plays on the European Tour. Hansen was born in Hillerød. He took up golf at the age of 12 enjoyed a successful amateur career which culminated with representing his country, and being the lowest-scoring player in the 2010 Eisenhower Trophy. He turned professional following this performance, earning a place on the Challenge Tour after three runner-up finishes on the third-tier Nordic League in 2011.
At the end of the round, whoever was in the lead won a prize and the lowest scoring player was eliminated. In case of a tie for the lowest score, host O'Connor would read a question with a quantifiable answer (for instance, how long a celebrity couple had been married). The first contestant to buzz in would offer an answer; if it was not exactly correct, the other contestant would also offer an answer; whoever was closer to the correct answer won the tiebreaker and advanced.
After several multiple choice video questions, the gameplay changes to a faster paced bonus round where contestants must buzz-in and answer questions related to the previous video round. In the bonus round, wrong answers do not penalize the player, and other players may not answer a question once one player has attempted it. After two video rounds and two bonus rounds, the lowest scoring player is eliminated. The final two players progress to the "under the microscope" round, where questions are presented rapidfire for a fixed amount of time, and contestants must buzz-in and choose from one of three answers.
In The Ride, instead of just forcing an opponent to answer, players engage in "FlakJack", where they launch multiple screws into the screen, partially or totally obscuring the question. The player being "screwed" must then answer, even though the question may no longer be readable. In German- language versions of the series, the "screw" is replaced by a "nail" which serves the same purpose. In You Don't Know Jack: Full Stream, either one or two screws (depending on the total number of players in the game, not counting Audience members) could be awarded in one of two ways: (1) they could be given to the player(s) who gave the fewest correct answers in the "Dis or Dat" round; and (2) to the lowest-scoring player(s) at the break starting Round Two.

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