Sunday Times 4716 by Dean Mayer

29:12. Another absolutely superb puzzle from Dean Mayer this week. I found it very tough, but a real delight to solve.

As so often seems to be the case, I spent absolutely ages on my last few in. RACCOON and INFLATE seemed the obvious answers, for instance, but for some reason I felt uncomfortable biffing them and spent a long time trying to work out the (elusive) wordplay to be sure. Similarly WIND GAUGE seemed the best fit, but I lacked the specific knowledge to be absolutely sure and eventually put it in with crossed fingers (which is an awkward way of typing). My last in, ENTHUSIASM, turned out to be a case of ‘spot the definition’.

By the time this blog is automatically posted in the early hours of Sunday morning this year’s crossword championship will be behind us, so if you’re reading this sentence it will be because I haven’t had time to make a specific comment on the day’s events.

Many thanks to Dean for an excellent half-hours entertainment, and here’s how I think it all works.

Definitions are underlined, anagrams indicated like (THIS)*.

Across
1 Fire men put out — so I like going in
ENTHUSIASM – (MEN)* containing THUS, I, AS. My last in, as mentioned. Even with all the checkers in I struggled to match any part of the clue to any part of the available letters. I got there eventually by working outwards from THUS.
6 At Wembley, no shot beats me
PASS – two definitions, one football-related, one Mastermind-related.
10 Is obliged to interrupt training period
PHASE – PE containing HAS (is obliged).
11 One making prisoner fitter
CONFORMER – someone making – or forming – a prisoner would be a CON-FORMER. I’m sure I wasn’t alone in trying to add a word meaning ‘fitter’ to CON to get a word meaning ‘one making’. This misdirection is made all the more cunning by the fact that ‘fitter’ looks like an adjective, whereas for wordplay purposes it’s a noun. Great clue!
12 Staying off the booze — or trying?
SOBER AS A JUDGE – I’m not sure how to classify this one. It’s a straight definition plus a sort of cryptic hint.
14 Leaderless group meeting trouble around Old England
ANGLIAgANG, reversal of AIL.
15 Not quite blue, my new fur
RACCOON – RACy, COO, N. It seemed certain that this had to be the answer but I wanted to be sure and it took me ages to see the first element of the wordplay. I also assumed for ages that ‘my’ was going to be COR, which didn’t help.
17 In future, keeps lost balloon
INFLATE – IN FATE (future) containing L (lost). Again this seemed very likely to be the answer but I wanted to be sure, and struggled for far too long with the wordplay. L for ‘lost’ appeared in the first puzzle I ever blogged, and was discussed at some length there.
18 Got around anything
CAUGHT – C, AUGHT.
20 One offensive from enemy lines?
POISON PEN LETTER – CD.
22 Doctor may be recorded using this
WIND GAUGE – another CD, this one entirely baffling if you don’t know that a doctor is ‘a cool sea breeze blowing in some countries’ (Collins). My least favourite clue in the puzzle, because it relies on a fairly arcane piece of knowledge to be understood. However I was able to put it in fairly confidently from the checkers, so I can’t complain.
23 Hygienic recycling centre by tip
CLEANrecyCling, LEAN.
24 Hives superior as honey pots
RASH – contained in ‘superior as honey’.
25 All because of accepting love, lady gutted
THOROUGHLY – TH(O)ROUGH, LadY.

Down
1 Spotting gap, one cuts up
ESPIAL – reversal of LA(I)PSE.
2 Soft bread sent in, not normally toast
TO ABSENT FRIENDS – (SOFT BREAD SENT IN)*.
3 Benefit of American English
USE – US, E.
4 Made real nine-carat rocks
INCARNATE – (NINE-CARAT)*.
5 From cavity — it’s morning! (Apparently)
SINUS – SUN IS up. Very clever.
7 Ready for war theatre, MOD’s revolutionary choppers
ARMED TO THE TEETH – (THEATRE MOD)*, TEETH. I feel I ought to have got this immediately from the definition and ‘choppers’, but I didn’t.
8 Officer material, possibly soldier
SERGEANT – SERGE (material), ANT.
9 Fancy shocking treatment? Call up nurses
CONJECTURE – CONJ(ECT)URE.
13 Circular pipe breaks while creating pools of water
BILLABONGS – BILL (circular), A(BONG)S. Australian term for an oxbow lake. When surrounded by coolibah trees they are popular watering-holes for jolly swagmen and jumbucks.
15 A current novel about old storyteller
RACONTEUR – (A CURRENT)* containing O.
16 The highest form of defence?
AIR POWER – CD that took me far too long to see.
19 Clenching butt, go in
TRENDY – TR(END)Y.
21 A bonus — husband’s rich
PLUSH – PLUS, H.
23 Vineyard workers reported
CRU – sounds like ‘crew’.

13 comments on “Sunday Times 4716 by Dean Mayer”

  1. Keriothe’s reaction to this puzzle surprised me, as this is probably the only time I’ve ever finished a Dean puzzle in under a half-hour. And I only biffed BILLABONGS, figuring it out after. I did not, on the other hand, figure out what ‘recycling’ was doing in CLEAN, reading the clue as C for ‘centre’ plus LEAN. Totally clueless re ‘doctor’, but. I wasted a bit of time on 1ac looking for an anagram of (firemenput), and a bit more in once again failing to spot the hidden RASH. LOI 1d, COD SINUS. Wonderful puzzle, but you knew that, didn’t you?
  2. … with this DM, loved it. 6ac had me … erm … beaten for a while. Perhaps because I hung up my goalkeeping boots and shirt some years ago.
    Especially liked the slight flavour of WA in the “doctor” part of 22ac and the obvious Australian ref at 13dn. Once a jolly swagman … always a jolly swagman. Eh?
  3. A lot of hard work and I nearly got there, if rather slowly, but left with 1ac and 1dn still unsolved I eventually ran out steam and used aids to finish them off.

    I’m not entirely convinced that the colloquial meaning of “sober as a judge” is quite the same thing as “staying off the booze”, but they’re both in the same area and the answer was obvious.

    Edited at 2016-10-23 06:04 am (UTC)

  4. This was indeed a fine exemplar of the art of succinct cluing from DM.

    50 minutes with LOI 16dn AIR POWER

    FOI 11ac CONFORMER thus not that cunning, methink.

    COD 22ac WIND GUAGE – the ‘Doctor’s Wind’ arrives every mornin’ on Jamaica’s north coast line. In the evenin’ the ‘Undertakers Wind’ blows away the bad air – as observed by Quarrel in Ian Fleming’s Dr No.

    Talking of whom WOD 1dn ESPIAL

  5. Morning all. As you’ll have seen, I didn’t change the blog to comment on yesterday’s events, partly perhaps because of the thoroughgoing dedication with which I drowned my sorrows in the George after an absolutely disastrous performance on the puzzles. I ended the hour and five minutes* with fully five clues unsolved. But the fun of the afternoon more than made up for it, and it very nice to meet up with some old and new friends from these parts.

    *we were given a bit of extra time to make up for a security alert about 45 minutes in, which fortunately turned out to be a false alarm but was very distracting for a while.

    Edited at 2016-10-23 09:19 am (UTC)

  6. Another gorgeous puzzle from Dean, which I managed to get through a touch more easily than many other of his offerings – which was greatly helped by spotting 1a and the three 15 letter clues at 7d, 12a and 20a pretty much straightaway, giving me a useful foothold.

    Several very pleasing penny-drop moments (particularly 5d and 22a). LOI 1d, not a word I knew and had to resort to aids as the wordplay was leaving me totally at sea.

    Thanks for the blog K.

  7. Sadly I was defeated by the unknowns of ESPIAL and WIND GAUGE. I might have spotted ESPIAL in the end, but not knowing the “doctor” either, I doubt I’d have ever got there. Not a good run for me; just failed on today’s, too… Ah well.
  8. 45 leisurely minutes on my print out, don’t remember any special problems although a few went in unparsed. The ‘Fremantle Doctor’ occurred to me after wards although never been there. Agree with jackkt re sober as a judge.
  9. I did know of the doctor, but couldn’t think of anything to fit the checkers at 1dn – spent some time thinking whether there was an alternative for one or more – bit eventually resorted to aid to find ESOIAL. So technically a DNF.
  10. Our paper in Canada published it with errors in the grid, as they often do. Frustrating!

Comments are closed.