Not in the same league
Meaning
To be significantly inferior or superior in ability, quality, or status compared to someone or something else.
Origin
The modern concept of a 'league' truly solidified with the explosion of organized sports in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Teams and athletes, once playing informally, began to be formally grouped by skill, geography, and professional status, creating structured competitions like baseball's Major League or football's Football League. This tiered system was designed to ensure competitive balance. When a team or player dramatically outclassed or underperformed others within their division, they were quite literally "not in the same league." It was a direct, undeniable statement about a vast gulf in ability. This vivid sporting comparison quickly leaped from the playing fields into everyday speech, becoming a potent metaphor to describe any stark difference in quality, status, or talent, far beyond the arena.
Examples
- Her groundbreaking research project made all the other proposals seem not in the same league.
- He might be a good local musician, but compared to a world-renowned virtuoso, he's simply not in the same league.