Across
1. Run off some jazz (4)
SCAT. Double definition. Well I got off on the wrong foot with “riff’ which was just careless solving. In fact this whole puzzle repays careful reading. Ella Fitzgerald – the queen of scat.
4. Strength of character in personal column (8)
BACKBONE. I briefly tried to do something with spine which obviously didn’t fit. Double definition.
8. US city partially waned, as apparently backwards (8)
PASADENA. A reversed (backwards) container clue (partially) – w[ANED AS AP]parently. California city which has a big college football game called the Rose Bowl every January. No I’m not interested either.
9. Implement – also utensil ultimately (4)
TOOL. TOO=also with the last letter in “utensiL” (ultimately).
10. Secret plan to take cannabis around Lithuanian capital (4)
PLOT. POT=cannabis surrounding the first letter (capital) in Lithuanian.
11. Comprehensive back in action (8)
DETAILED. TAIL=back contained in DEED=action.
12. Praise cultivated in land of old (6)
PERSIA. Anagram (cultivated) of “praise”.
14, Eat as a joke audibly? (6)
INGEST. Homophone (audibly) of “in jest”=as a joke, and thank goodness one that works for everyone.
16. New menus are identifying what to type to log in? (4,4)
USER NAME. Anagram (new) of MENUS ARE.
18. Vermin taking a thousand diamonds (4)
MICE. M=thousand and ICE=diamonds.
19. Plate found in cupboard is charming (4)
DISC. I carelessly entered “dish” at first which made a horlicks of 13d. It’s a container clue where the word is found in cupboar[D IS C]harming.
20. Difficulty sleeping in higgledy-piggledy mansion one tucked in (8)
INSOMNIA. Anagram (higgledy-piggledy) of MANSION and I=one.
22. Very large royal (8)
PRINCELY. Double definition. As in a princely sum.
23. American tug (4)
YANK. Another double definition.
Down
2. Idiot, daily, to tell stories (7)
CHARLIE. CHAR=daily and LIE=tell stories. This definition always makes me slightly uncomfortable because it’s my brother’s nickname, although I call him something else and he is anything but.
3. Brown bread for your health, perhaps? (5)
TOAST. And another double definition.
4. Extra farewell (3)
BYE. And another. In sports (tennis, cricket, football) I believe it means that in a tournament, series of matches or competition an individual or team can advance to the next round without actully playing. Or this may just be a cricket term. None of this is exactly my forte.
5. Boundary between land and water so clean, it turns out (9)
COASTLINE. Anagram (turns out) of “so clean, it”.
6. In time, metal put in sack (7)
BATTING. This is a tricky one and certainly could be found in the other cryptic any day. UK sports are not my bag but I’ve come to learn a number of cricket, rugby and football terms and names. In cricket the side that is batting is “in”. Of course y’all know that but it’s well hidden just the same. T=time plus TIN=metal, contained in BAG=sack.
7. Rope, feature including loop? (5)
NOOSE. While this could be a feature of a rope (without going into gruesome details), in fact I believe the feature here is NOSE which includes a second O=loop. I first read this with “loop” as the definition. Does anyone see this otherwise? Not difficult but still tricky parsing.
11. Awfully smart idea to adapt for the theatre (9)
DRAMATISE. Anagram (awfully) of SMART IDEA.
13. Southern people embraced by an Arab (7)
SARACEN. S[outhern] plus RACE=people contained in AN. Another clue that might well crop up in the other cryptic. It may be that the word mostly survives now as part of a pub name.
15. Part one, it’s rearranged to cover first of chapters (7)
SECTION. Basic lesson in cryptic solving – ignore the punctuation. Except of course when it can’t be ignored….. Anagram of ONE IT’S (rearranged) with a C for chapter in the middle.
17. Malingerer denied victory, one going downhill (5)
SKIER. The malingerer is a skiver ( nice word) removing the V as in victory.
18. Parent kept under wraps (5)
MUMMY. Sort of a double definition and a beauty of a clue. So we have Persia, a Saracen and an ancient Egyptian.
21. Remain, having cleared out a filthy home (3)
STY. STAY=remain. Remove (clear out) the A and you have the pig’s place. Rather unfair to pigs who are very clean creatures.
I found this hard and at 16 minutes, it took me a minute longer than the Don’s offering yesterday, mainly down to problems getting started. In view of the need to cater for various levels of ability and experience, and I know some felt a bit deflated yesterday, it’s a shame to have two hard ones in a row.
With reference to 6dn, perhaps it would be useful to explain some of the rules of cricket to those not already au fait with them:
You have two sides, one out in the field and one in. Each man that’s in the side that’s in goes out, and when he’s out he comes in and the next man goes in until he’s out. When they are all out, the side that’s out comes in and the side that’s been in goes out and tries to get those coming in, out. Sometimes you get men still in and not out.
When a man goes out to go in, the men who are out try to get him out, and when he is out he goes in and the next man in goes out and goes in. There are two men called umpires who stay out all the time and they decide when the men who are in are out. When both sides have been in and all the men have been out, and both sides have been out twice after all the men have been in, including those who are not out, that is the end of the game
Edited at 2016-01-28 05:35 am (UTC)
6d LOI until I was able to reverse engineer it and saw the “in” definition.
Thanks Olivia for parsing 17d – I was trying to stuff WIN into it without success.
Thanks too to Jackkt for giving us such a concise, straightforward and easy explanation of cricket. Now will some of our transatlantic colleagues describe baseball to me in equally lucid terms?
Puzzles this difficult should be rare.
I think 1a has come up before which is how I dragged it out of the memory banks. COD for me was 20a purely for the use of higgledy-piggledy as the anagrind.
Some very good clues I thought and I never had the feeling of hopelessness I had yesterday for quite a while.I was very pleased to get Saracen after a long journey around the Arab world. My last one was 6d and I had written Batting but couldn’t parse it until I had the breakthrough moment. And I am a long-standing cricket fan, and I had one of the tea towels mentioned by Jackkt!
David
Also in the OED is SCAT as a colloquialism meaning “run off” or “go away”, used in the imperative to e.g. drive off an animal (cat) or a person.
We really do find the blog an essential part of explaining the answers. It is so helpful to beginners. It wasn’t helped either by not having Charlie or Toast which was a bit pathetic of us – thanks again!