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The phrase "always difficult to win" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation or competition that consistently presents challenges in achieving victory.
Example: "In this sport, the competition is fierce, and it's always difficult to win against such skilled opponents."
Alternatives: "consistently hard to achieve victory" or "perpetually challenging to succeed".
Exact(4)
"The second year is always difficult to win [the title] again.
Giants, 15-13 MONDAY 9 P.M. Seattle (2-2) at Kansas City (2-2) is is always difficult to win at Arrowhead Stadium.
And without all these things, it was always difficult to win a football game".
France away is always a tough game - they have huge crowds, it's noisy and it's always difficult to win there.
Similar(56)
It has always been difficult to win by taking an appeal to federal court, known as a habeas corpus petition; when Congress passed a law sharply limiting such appeals in 1996, it became even more difficult.
Whenever Israel has found itself in conflicts without borders -- south Lebanon, the Palestinian intifada in the West Bank -- it has always lost, because it always found it difficult to win support, either at home or abroad, for the force that is required to win a war without borders.
Yahoo was a huge early success in the internet business, but now that there is so much competition for people's attention and so many ways to capture it online it was always going to be difficult to win simply by throwing money and people at the problem.
There would be less pressure if we had won but today was always going to be difficult to win.
"It will be very difficult to win.
Golf's majors on difficult courses are difficult to win.
It's very, very difficult to win".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com