Sunday's joust with the Lakers made me long for another Boston-Los Angeles Final.
From the sportsillustrated.cnn.com
In Game 2, a 3-0 Blues victory, the joust clearly favored the Backes Street Boys.
From the stltoday.com
She loved a verbal joust but was also a very warm and generous-hearted individual.
From the forbes.com
After many tries Will is able to joust properly and is therefore ready to compete.
From the en.wikipedia.org
There ensued a fiercely-contested joust with the opposing squadrons as spectators.
From the en.wikipedia.org
And then he'd return to the castle and push the jester around with his joust.
From the scienceblogs.com
Lennon and Peter Houston, the United manager, have had the odd public, verbal joust.
From the guardian.co.uk
Not in a Renaissance fair way, though I bet he could joust and eat a turkey leg too.
From the time.com
Our nation has been snared in this unproductive joust for the best part of 20 years.
From the themercury.com.au
More examples
A combat between two mounted knights tilting against each other with blunted lances
Joust against somebody in a tournament by fighting on horseback
Joust was an event played in several incarnations of the television series Gladiators. In this event, a contender and Gladiator engage in battle on mechanical skybikes. The object of the game is to unseat the opponent.
First commissioned for "the dragon quintet" edited by Marvin Kaye, "Joust" appeared as a short story along with "In the Dragon's House" by Orson Scott Card, "Judgment" by Elizabeth Moon, "Love in a time of Dragons" by Tanith Lee and "Dragon King" by Michael Swanwick.
Joust is the name of a steel roller coaster located at Dutch Wonderland near Lancaster, Pennsylvania. It is a "Big Dipper" style roller coaster, manufactured by Chance Rides. It sits where the Flying Carousel once stood, in front of the Kingdom Coaster.
Joust is an arcade game produced by Williams Electronics in 1982, and ported to numerous platforms.
Jousting in its basic form is a contest between two knights mounted on horses and using lances. It can also consist of a series of competitions using a variety of weapons, usually in sets of three per weapon (such as tilting with a lance, blows with the battle axe, strokes with the dagger, or ...
(jouster) A person who jousts; A horse used for jousting
(Jouster) a woman mounted on horseback, travelling town to town peddling fish.