mop up the ice
English
    
    Etymology
    
From the image of cleaning the ice with one's body
Verb
    
mop up the ice (third-person singular simple present mops up the ice, present participle mopping up the ice, simple past and past participle mopped up the ice)
- (figure skating) To fall many times during a performance.
-  1997, Brian Boitano & Suzanne Harper, Boitano's Edge: Inside The Real World Of Figure Skating, →ISBN, page 90:- On the other hand, you may see a skater hit all his triples in practice, then he mops up the ice during the competition.
 
-  2007 January 19, Randy Starkman, “Hawker's a scrapper dressed up in sequins”, in Toronto Star:- At last year's Canadian championships, she KO'd her long-held Olympic dream when she mopped up the ice in her short program.
 
-  2014 May 9, Lewis Funke, “25th Ice Capades: A Captivating Affair”, in The New York Times:- There are LaBrecque and Bussey mopping up the ice in the usual pratfalls and assorted other spills.
 
 
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