The reruns of this program outdraw all of the first run and live shows that they do. |
|
How, it wondered in a December article, could a conservative all-news network outdraw a liberal one? |
|
Only two European cities managed to outdraw Glasgow in terms of fans attending top-flight matches. |
|
In the early 1980s, the Anderson High Indians could outdraw the Indiana Pacers, and the Colts were still based in Baltimore. |
|
Say it ain't so: professional soccer is starting to outdraw professional baseball. |
|
Critics likened him to a young gunfighter who knew he could outdraw any challenger. |
|
A quartet off the street is likely to outdraw what the RimRockers were pulling last year. |
|
A less compelling final between Toronto and Oklahoma City is possible, too, although that matchup would still outdraw the best possible NHL final: Pittsburgh, with Sidney Crosby, against San Jose, with Thornton. |
|
Our fathers taught us stuff like rigging blocks so they all face into the wind and the theory that bigger decoy spreads outdraw smaller ones. |
|
Knowing I can't outdraw a gun already pointed at me puts a certain spin on the issue many have not considered. |
|
Certainly he could outdraw just about anybody, and he knew how to tell a story, seamlessly weaving words and pictures together. |
|
Conventional wisdom in the industry says one-off pubs and taverns always outdraw chain-owned operations because people like the feel of a locally owned watering hole. |
|