long shot

long shot

1. A bet that has a low probability of winning. That horse is a long shot, but the bet will pay well if he wins the race.
2. Something that has a very small chance of succeeding. I know it's a long shot because of his busy schedule, but maybe I can convince him to help me with this project. Her candidacy was a long shot from the beginning, and her landslide defeat was no surprise.
See also: long, shot
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

*long shot

Fig. a risky bet; an attempt, bet, or proposition that has a low probability of success. (*Typically: be ~; seem like ~.) Your solution is a long shot, but we'll try it and hope it works.
See also: long, shot
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

long shot, a

A remote possibility of success, as in It's a long shot that Joan will actually finish the marathon, or He may be a good programmer, but he's a long shot for that job. This expression alludes to the inaccuracy of early firearms, which when shot over a distance rarely hit the target. It is commonly used in horseracing for a bet made at great odds. A related phrase is not by a long shot, meaning "not even remotely," as in I'll never make it to California in three days, not by a long shot. [Late 1800s]
See also: long
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a long shot

COMMON
1. If you describe a way of solving a problem as a long shot, you mean that there is little chance that it will succeed, but you think it is worth trying. You could try to find her. It's a long shot but you could start with the phone book.
2. You can also say that something is a long shot when it is very unlikely to happen. It seemed such a long shot, me walking over the hills, and seeing you at the end of it. Compare with by a long shot. Note: The reference here is to someone shooting at a target from a very long distance.
See also: long, shot
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

a ˈlong shot

(informal) an attempt or a guess which you do not expect to be successful but which is worth trying: Try ringing him at home. It’s a long shot, I know, but he might just be there. ‘Are you going to apply for the manager’s job?’ ‘I don’t know. It’s a bit of a long shot, isn’t it?’A long shot is a shot fired from a long distance and so unlikely to hit its target.
See also: long, shot
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

long shot

n. a wild guess; an attempt at something that has little chance of succeeding. You shouldn’t expect a long shot to pay off.
See also: long, shot
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

long shot, (not by) a

(Not) a remote chance. Early firearms were notoriously inaccurate, and a shot from a distance rarely hit the target. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries a long shot meant just that, a shot fired from afar. By the late nineteenth century the term had been transferred to other improbable circumstances, such as a wild guess or, more specifically, a bet against considerable odds. From about 1865, however, it also meant far-fetched, as in this OED citation from Young Gentleman’s Magazine (1873): “This did not, however, suit her long-shot tactics.”
See also: long
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • a long shot
  • long shot, (not by) a
  • long shot, a
  • bet on
  • bet on (someone or something)
  • play the field
  • play the field, to
  • bet on it
  • bet (one's) boots
  • welch on (someone or something)
References in periodicals archive
Iraizoz palmed a long shot from Alves off the bar in the 80th to keep Athletic close ahead of the second leg.
Egoyan often frames Stephens in outdoor long shots, the better to emphasize his hopelessly inadequate and anachronistic presence in the very community he descends upon to save.
But final approval of the measure is considered a long shot.
Night When Noon Follows by Cheryl Boyce Taylor, Long Shot Productions, 2000, $12.00, ISBN 0-9654738-4-8
California, by a long shot (figures based on the industrial classification for "miscellaneous plastics products").
We urged people to help us eliminate that list, and while we knew it was a long shot to totally eradicate it, the list shrank by 44--from 137 to 93--no small task.
The personal computer isn't dead by a long shot, but its role as the primary platform for application development will soon be surpassed by network computing or e-business, said Paul Boulay, program director of marketing in IBM's Network Computer Division, Somers, N.Y.
He uncovered the humorous possibilities of multiple exposures, found comedy in dissolves and yet knew well enough, from his vaudeville childhood, when to use a long shot and let it run on to show the full, daring acrobatics of a stunt.
Seth as Fred Flarsky and Charlize as Charlotte Fields in their new movie, Long Shot CHARLIZE THERON was nervous to make a romantic comedy.
Seth Rogen stepped up his fashion game while promoting the film 'Long Shot' with Charlize Theron.
PADRAIG HARRINGTON insists he is a "long shot" to lift his third Claret Jug on Sunday.
Long shot of footwear strewn on the road various shots of the injured protesters
* I KNOW that this is a long shot but I am feeling desperate!
Italy responded five minutes later with a long shot from Alberto Gilardino that rolled directly into the arms of goalkeeper Tim Howard.
MICHAEL Vaughan has dampened expectations of an Ashes series return by admitting his chances of making his comeback before the New Year remain a "long shot".