Times 27,461: Jumping Through Your Limited Quota of Friday Hoops

I ended up not enjoying this one very much, the clues too often feeling like the fairly bland fare that is the staple of weekend Jumbos, but I can’t say it didn’t beat me: I got woefully bogged down in the NE, not being able to see 8dn, 12ac, 16ac, 6dn or my LOI 5ac for the life of me for ages. Apparently your solving brain just shuts down on you sometimes! The horrid words DENTATE finally hove into view, which made ODESSA gettable (very annoying that we had essentially the same clue within recent memory), and put BRANDISH within reach. I grudgingly accepted that LANCASHIRE was a really fun clue and biffed in TABLOID without parsing, to post a very unsatisfactory time indeed.

What I did like: COD 25ac which was an excellent marriage of surface and cryptic, the brio of the presentation for the fairly simple 5dn, and “in clandestine manner” as an anagrind. Thank you to the setter and here’s hoping I get my cryptic mojo back sooner rather than later… could be worse of course, I could be off the boil with a Times Cryptic Crossword Championship only a few short weeks away!

1 Part of journey left, including northern region (7)
LAPLAND – LAP L AND [part of journey | left | including]

5 Paper ticket covering first of our breaks (7)
TABLOID – TAB [ticket], + LID [covering] (which) O{ur} “breaks”

9 Right party for fool? (3)
CON – double def

10 Party given limited quota of famous people? (11)
CELEBRATION – or alternatively CELEB RATION, a “limited quota of famous people”

11 Girl’s instant control on aircraft (8)
JOYSTICK – JOY’S TICK [girl’s | instant]. FOI.

12 Port sent further back, without tips (6)
ODESSA – {p}ASSED O{n} [sent further], reversed, first and last letters removed. We’ve had a very similar clue not that long ago, it was hard to “see” then, and it’s still hard now.

15 End bitten off pasty, smallest amount (4)
WHIT – WHIT{e} [pasty, as in complexion, with the last letter removed]

16 Way to bank money, people formerly taxing cheese! (10)
LANCASHIRE – LANE [way] to “bank” CASH IR [money | people formerly taxing]

18 Nonsense jokes associated with Punch (10)
CODSWALLOP – CODS [jokes], associated with WALLOP [punch]

19 Storage space got rid of (4)
SHED – double def

22 Old Greek bronze captures Greek goddess, almost entirely (6)
THEBAN – TAN [bronze] “captures” HEB{e} [Greek goddess, missing last letter]

23 Country in recent test (8)
PASTORAL – PAST ORAL [recent | test]

25 Where one’s going on date, is it rude to pinch person’s behind? (11)
DESTINATION – (ON DATE IS IT*) [“rude”], to “pinch” {perso}N

27 Nice tea chest finally put away (3)
EAT – {nic}E {te}A {ches}T

28 The French all there to scoff good Italian food (7)
LASAGNE – LA SANE [the French | all there] to “scoff” G [good]

29 Old poet, a little salacious, pens erotica (7)
SPENSER – hidden in {salaciou}S PENS ER{otica}

DOWN
1 Muscle tightening in rugby player, long conversation ensuing? (7)
LOCKJAW – LOCK JAW [rugby player | long conversation]

2 Supporter for women plying trade in clandestine manner (5,6)
PANTY GIRDLE – (PLYING TRADE*) [“in clandestine manner”]

3 A bed bagged by officer for US writer (6)
ALCOTT – A + COT [bed] “bagged” by LT [officer]

4 Lovely dresser originally fit for office (10)
DELECTABLE – D{resser} + ELECTABLE [fit for office]

5 VAT on article? Blow me! (4)
TUBA – TUB [vat] on A [article]

6 Awful din in loud display (8)
BRANDISH – (DIN*) [“awful”] in BRASH [loud]

7 Sash for brim, odd bits trimmed off (3)
OBI – {f}O{r} B{r}I{m}

8 Equipped with serrated edge in hollow, dug in (7)
DENTATE – DENT ATE [hollow | dug in]

13 Fragments scattered in mess, at that point buried (11)
SMITHEREENS – (IN MESS*) [“scattered”], (with) THERE [at that point] “buried”

14 Jumping through hoops perhaps, bachelor fills in puzzle, second to last (10)
ACROBATICS – BA [bachelor] “fills in” ACRO{S->}TIC, having moved its S (for second) to the end

17 Promising appreciation of music, being into jazz (8)
SWEARING – EAR [appreciation of music], “into” SWING [jazz]

18 Kremlin directed a jerk in the wrong direction (7)
CITADEL – reversed LED A TIC [directed | a | jerk]

20 Muscle you need to lift register and large papers (7)
DILATOR – reversed ROTA L ID [register | large | papers]

21 This second hundred comes in one (2,4)
AT ONCE – TON [hundred] “comes in” ACE [one]

24 Shave couple by the ears? (4)
PARE – homophone of PAIR [couple]

26 Lives with son’s relative (3)
SIS – IS [lives] with S [son]

41 comments on “Times 27,461: Jumping Through Your Limited Quota of Friday Hoops”

  1. I had pretty much the same opinion of the puzzle as V did; generally tending to meh. Started slow–FOI SHED–and ended slow, with TABLOID, BRANDISH, & DENTATE I think being my last ones. DNK LOCK, and wondered if there was such a thing as BACKJAW. I wasted too much time thinking 6d would have an F, and that 22ac would have an O.

    Edited at 2019-09-20 05:51 am (UTC)

  2. I had the same problem making my way into the NE as others, but apart from that I made fairly steady progress, with FTOI (First Tentative One In!) 9a CON helping me spot FOI 3d PANTYGIRDLE and getting me started on the NW corner, and working my way around anticlockwise from there.

    Finished off by BRANDISHING a DENTATE TABLOID in LANCASHIRE at around the 45 minute mark.

  3. I’ve just started solving via the Crossword Club this week and when it told me average time for this was 27 minutes I thought it was going to be tough. I was therefore pleased and surprised to find myself in 5th place a mere point behind Verlaine (not that I know what that point means).

    Like Verlaine I found the NE the most difficult area, finishing with DENTATE. I had one gripe today which was the clueing of PAST as ‘recent’. Clearly the past doesn’t have to be recent so am I missing something here?

    1. But surely there’s no denying that ‘recent’ is ‘past’ so the clue has it the right way round. I’d agree that ‘past’ clueing ‘recent’ would be wrong.
      1. ‘Recent’ clueing ‘past’ is a definition by example, whereas the other way round it isn’t. So on strict Ximenean terms the latter is kosher and the former isn’t! I have no problem with it either way.
  4. 16:00 … on the bright side, verlaine, it does give some of us a rare chance to say “I went faster than verlaine!”

    The above may be clouding my judgment somewhat, but I did enjoy the puzzle. PANTY GIRDLE and DESTINATION are both terrific.

    1. I see this is nicely reflected by the SNITCH, with your personal NITCH of 89 compared to Verlaine’s of 224!
  5. Like vinyl1 I had a problem getting going, in fact losing at least 5 minutes before spotting LASAGNE as my FOI. But after that I was surprised how steady my progress was and things started to flow as I built each answer on a checker from the previous one.

    As my target half-hour approached I had 4 answers missing in the NE quarter but perservered and finished on 36 minutes, which I rank as a success after a poor beginning.

    I thought the standard of setting was fine.

    Edited at 2019-09-20 06:12 am (UTC)

  6. No real problems but a little clunky in places. Liked CELEBRATION (although I was fixated on A LIST for a while). I was also stuck on WAN for pasty until I did an alphabet trawl.
  7. Unlike some, I enjoyed this a lot, maybe because I passed through a shower of falling pennies. I liked the CELEB RATION, the cheese, the brass instrument and the bottom pinching. Seeing the SNITCH I thought I’d still be solving by now, but it all went in steadily. LOI ACROBATICS. 13:31
  8. I quite enjoyed this. 37 minutes with LOI ODESSA despite its recent appearance. I can’t make PANTY GIRDLE COD without sounding kinky, and the same problem applies with pinching a date’s bottom despite the great surface it presents. (That’s enough, Ed.) In any case COD has to go to LANCASHIRE, back in the First Division where we belong. A cause for CELEBRATION, not that I’m allowed to drink until the cavern from the two less than successful hours in the dentist’s chair earlier in the week has healed up. The NE was tough, with the serrated edges of DENTATE a further painful reminder. But a good puzzle. Thank you V and setter.
  9. Undone by 16AC. Went down a rabbit hole of people formerly taxing before SMILE for “cheese”. Thought there might have been a financial district ending in MILE. Also missed the subtlety of 21D, just sticking a C in AT ONE and thinking it a poor clue.

    Thanks Blogger and Setter.

  10. With SIS and ODESSA, I was thinking we were getting a bit of deja vu, which cheered me up no end (noticing this, I mean), as only a while ago I did the same crossword twice in three weeks, enjoyed it each time, and hadn’t a clue I’d done it before.

    If it makes you feel a bit better, V, I had to come here to get the parsing of TABLOID, so you still have your uses.

  11. 30 mins without rushing. Nice puzzle. The snitch is surprisingly high fir this one, I thought. Thanks v.
  12. at 28 mins (under half an hour) for a Friday is special for Old Meldrew. (Ever nearer to Lord Verlaine, but not the hem of his garment.)

    Went from left to right, totally on the wavelength for once.

    FOI 28ac LASAGNE

    LOI 20dn DILATOR

    COD 8dn DENTATE (Denticulation is the subject of a forthcoming book of mine! I’ll fetch me coat!)

    WOD 13d SMITHEREENS (Simpson’s little Smithers!)

    As per The Hon. Harmonic-Rowe, Mr. Snitch is rather uppity today.

    Edited at 2019-09-20 01:15 pm (UTC)

  13. I thought it was the fact that I have to ration my solving time on a Friday that was having an inhibiting effect but I see quite a few others had trouble getting started. No complaints about the puzzle though – I enjoyed it. I was very slow to see what was going on with EAT – perhaps because we had “dug in” at 8d so I wasn’t convinced by “put away” in 27a. So I spent time trying to make “the” (French tea) work. Nope. 22.57
  14. Same as most others, slow to start, stuck in NE. No time as in two chunks, probably totalling 30′. I also noted the repeated recent words: ODESSA, OBI, CON, not to mention BRANDISH a bit like BLANDISH…

    Thanks verlaine and setter.

  15. Another who found this easier than the snitch suggests; 23 minutes beginning with LASAGNE and moving steadily north and east. Surprised to see ODESSA again so soon.
  16. Is that the third ODESSA in a week? Can’t move for them at the moment.

    9m 27s, I thought this was a nice puzzle. LANCASHIRE was my COD, THEBAN was LOI, and my only MERs were for some loose-ish anagrinds.

    1. I assume the reference to the crossword championship doesn’t indicate there’s been news in the last few days that I’ve missed?
  17. I got off to a fairly quick start in the NW corner with CON FOI, and ALCOTT, JOYSTICK and LOCKJAW following rapidly. The SW took a little longer, but still filled up nicely. The RHS was a lot tougher and I had to extract answers like teeth(sorry BW!). DILATOR and SMITHEREENS were key to progressing further, but the NE held out for a good while longer. ODESSA went in from checkers but took a while to parse. LANCASHIRE led to BRANDISH and the rest came in a rush. Tough puzzle! 46:48. Thanks setter and V.
  18. 17:48. I don’t get to say I went faster than verlaine, but nonetheless I enjoyed this one a lot. Properly chewy, particularly the NE corner which took a long time to unravel.
  19. With SIS and ODESSA, I was thinking we were getting a bit of deja vu, which cheered me up no end (noticing this, I mean), as only a while ago I did the same crossword twice in three weeks, enjoyed it each time, and hadn’t a clue I’d done it before.

    If it makes you feel a bit better, V, I had to come here to get the parsing of TABLOID, so you still have your uses.

  20. I can’t disagree more with some of the comments above. This was one of the most anachronistic throwback examples we’ve seen for a while.
  21. 10:31. I think you’re just having an off day V, as the puzzle was, for me at least, both pretty straightforward and pretty good quality.

    Maybe it’s no coincidence that one of the things you liked, the use of “in clandestine manner” as an anagrind, was the thing that caused me a MER.

    Edited at 2019-09-20 11:57 am (UTC)

  22. No over-positive or over-negative feelings about the overall puzzle here. Like others, I had trouble in the First Quadrant, but a good part of it was down to jumbling letters in Celebration and Delectable giving me the wrong crossers to work from. In the US the definition to Tuba would be considered a remarkably rude invective, and having it in the text along with bottom pinching gave things a distinctly non-drawing room flavour.
  23. Oh dear. Thought I’d done so well, only to find a DILATER. Well I didn’t see the ROTA so I can’t complain. Some ice words in there SMITHEREENS CODSWALLOP, and haven’t we had THEBANS rather too often recently? Like V, I thought there were too many chestnuts here for an enjoyable Friday Xword.
    FOI ALCOTT
    COD LANCASHIRE
  24. Nice puzzle, and definitely of Fridayish difficulty for me. Like many others, it seems, I ground to a bit of a halt in the NE, unable to get CONCAVE out of my mind for some time, despite also being certain that the celebs would be on the A-LIST.
  25. ….I thought Sawbill’s description of “clunky” nailed this very well – and some clues took a while to “click”.

    Same problem as many others as I’d almost exhausted the across clues before setting pen to paper at 27A. Fortunately, I then constructed DILATOR by working backwards, and SMITHEREENS followed quickly. From that point I worked steadily to finish in a half-decent time.

    Thanks to V for parsing TABLOID, and (to my shame !!) ODESSA. I needed to write out the half-completed anagrist before seeing CELEBRATION.

    FOI EAT
    LOI THEBAN
    COD LANCASHIRE (Mrs.Kirkham’s creamy please !)
    TIME 12:34

  26. NE took a while and managed to type BLANDISH which we saw not long ago instead of BRANDISH. Oh well.
  27. I found this tough and I can’t say I enjoyed the struggle that much. I was slow to start and it didn’t really flow, just random, separate entries appearing in different quadrants but the bottom half slowly came together until after about 50 mins I was left with just the seemingly intractable NE (funnily enough I was stuck on exactly the same 5 clues that Verlaine mentions in his preamble – a similar solving experience perhaps, just a lot slower). I had to go back to work so I put the puzzle away. When I came back to it after work I was able to tidy everything up in another 5 mins.
  28. I seem to be in line with the majority in finding it tough to get started, the difference being that I didn’t find it got any easier as I went along. I was slightly discouraged that my only known ancient Greek town – Troy – would not fit 22ac, but then discovered that I also knew Thebes. The poet and the US author, fortunately, were the usual ones. I got slightly fuddled over CODSWALLOP, mis-remembering that the vocal device used by Professors was a “swallop” thereby leaving me short of a plural; it’s not, of course (it’s a swazzle).

  29. But not the worst crossword by a long chalk. Worth 7/10. ‘Clandestine manner’ as an anagrind doesn’t work for me. Mr Grumpy

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