From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishunplacedun‧placed /ˌʌnˈpleɪst◂/ adjective British English DSCOMPETITIONnot one of the first three to finish in a race or competition
Examples from the Corpus
unplaced• Another Darlington student, Gillian Elders, 19, got through to the final in the kitchen design section but was unplaced.• He dropped to second class in the examinations of June 1788, and after that was unplaced.• As a three-year-old he was unplaced in his first four races then ran a good second in the Chelmsford Stakes at Randwick.• At the meeting the Principal recounted to us the statistical facts about the unplaced special students in our classes.