Search: on the ball origin
Why: We made a plan, and within seconds, I had tickets in my inbox.
Katrina: OMG YOURE ON THE BALLis that phrasing even right? on the ball? what does that even mean>4:50 PM me: its right, but i dont knowthere was a poster in our library that said "Get on the ball and read"wtf?4:51 PM Katrina: i mean, i know it means to get on top of things. but why a ball?me: let me google that for you
By the 1930s, the meaning had broadened to apply to someone who was "especially alert or capable." Maybe it came from the advice: "Always keep your eye on the ball."He has simply arrived at the stage which all good pitchers dread. Ball players do not attempt to explain why these things are. They say: “He’s got speed and a curve, but, there’s ‘nothing’ on the ball.” This vague “nothing” is the thing. It means that the pitcher has lost that little “jump”, or some peculiar deceptive break with which he has fooled batters.
Source: World Wide Words,
The More You Know: Other idioms that came from baseball:
- Ballpark figure
- Big leagues
- Bush league
- Cover your bases
- Knock it out of the park
- Out of left field
- Play hardball
- Right off the bat
- Screwball
- Step up to the plate
- Three strikes
- Touch base
- Way off base
- Whole new ball game



