Timed at 19:09, which seems about right for what I found a very two-paced puzzle – more than half the across clues went in on first look, but things slowed rapidly after that, particularly in the SW corner.
| Across |
| 1 |
FRICASSEE – [CAS(h) in 1’S] in FREE. |
| 9 |
LA PLATA – LAP + (mea)L + A ‘TA’. |
| 10 |
deliberately omitted |
| 11 |
EASEL – EASE + L(ength). |
| 12 |
GREEN BELT – (GENTREBEL)*. As the old joke goes, if you get a green belt in judo, you can defend yourself from people who want to build houses on you. |
| 13 |
RELIGHT – (THEGIRL)*. |
| 15 |
SET TO – backwards in MOT test. |
| 17 |
CRUSH – double def. |
| 18 |
CHIVY – C.H. + IVY. I’d always thought this had a double V, but it appears either is acceptable. |
| 19 |
SCENE =”SEEN”, as in “Don’t make a scene”. |
| 20 |
REDCOAT – RED + C.O. + AT. Once more, our North American contributors’ favourite soldier makes an appearance. |
| 23 |
PARKINSON – PARK + [SO in INN]. I was picturing Michael Parkinson with a badge and a gun until I remembered Parkinson’s Law. |
| 25 |
FACED – (DECAF)rev. |
| 27 |
BRAVADO – B(oyfriend) + RAV(e) + A DO. “Bottle” here being courage, rather than the Jeroboam type vessel I was half looking for. |
| 28 |
EMIRATE – EMIGRATE without (kin)G. |
| 29 |
RIDGE TENT – RID + [(Os)TE(nd) in GENT]. |
| |
| Down |
| 1 |
FORAGE – F.O. RAGE, though these days it would have to be FCORAGE, which doesn’t quite work. |
| 2 |
ILL BE BOUND – cryptic def. |
| 3 |
ASTONISH – AS + (N.I. in TOSH). “Tosh” as “mate” was last discussed in July. |
| 4 |
SADIE – S.A. + DIE. As has been discussed at length here, I think S.A. in its “Sex Appeal” meaning (there are others, of course) is one of those expressions that lives on in crosswords and nowhere else in the world, and perhaps ought to be allowed to fade away itself. |
| 5 |
ELECTRODE – ELECT (the adjectival sense as in President Elect) + (Mahle)R + ODE. |
| 6 |
APPEAL =”A PEEL“. |
| 7 |
PADS – double def. (I spent a long time weighing up BARS as a double def. with an added &lit. because of the third, musical, definition; however, I couldn’t quite make “flats” tally with this – I was thinking a sand bar might be a flat, but the dictionary was adamant that it’s a ridge, and thus definitely not a flat). Particularly with the unhelpful _A_S checkers, this is the sort of clue that you could easily see causing a slip under championship conditions. |
| 8 |
HARLOTRY – LOT in HARRY. |
| 14 |
GOING SPARE – double def. |
| 16 |
TEST PAPER – (PETERSAPT)*. |
| 17 |
CAREFREE – C. A REF(e)REE. |
| 18 |
CELIBATE – (ELI + BAT) in C.E. In the modern vernacular, celibacy seems to be more about sex than marriage, but the OED, at least, does not follow (celibate=unmarried, rather than abstaining from intercourse). |
| 21 |
OLDHAM – HOLD with the H pushed forward/down, + A M(otorway). |
| 22 |
ON FOOT – the Foot in question being the former Labour leader. |
| 24 |
RABID – (BIRDA)*, with two possible anagram indicators confusing the issue. |
| 26 |
CHIT – C(harts) + HIT. |
Oli
I’m sure this kind of ambiguity is what they try to avoid in championship puzzles, but when it happens my experience is that ideas like “flats” => BARS are not accepted as valid alternatives.
Bars = blocks
Bars = blocks of flats (DBE indicated by the question mark).
This makes the clue a double definition (one cryptic) where one word (“blocks”) is shared by both definitions.
A bit of a stretch but I think it’s defensible and more amusing than the correct answer.
As mentioned above I toyed with the idea (of BARS) myself but concluded if that was indeed the intention then the setter and crossword editor must be in need of immediate retirement. Happily the idea was wrong and they are not.
Could someone explain the INN bit of 23 ac. to me, please? (scratches particularly dense head)
Unfortunately, I also had ‘going stale’ instead of ‘going spare’, which is another UK expression that is not widely used elsewhere.
Would one of the BARS supporters give me a reasonable explanation of how the clue works?
I can see BLOCKS=PADS or BARS, but I can’t see how FLATS is anything other than PADS. If someone can (preferably with a dictionary reference) justify FLATS=BARS then the clue is indeed faulty.
I’m just not convinced.
Oli
Having seen PADS here I would say that this is the correct answer.
I put in PADS without much thought, on the “flats/places to live” basis, but I can see where the BARS admirers are coming from. That rare thing, an either/or?
CoD to any one of the above.
The rest is reasonably straightforward and certainly livelier than yesterday
I found this far more enjoyable than yesterday’s rather dry offering, particularly the Houdini and Parky clues and my COD, Harlotry.
I wonder if the setter was trying to convey his/her mood with anger/angry featuring in 3 clues.
Michael Foot is remembered over here for writing what was dubbed “the longest suicide note in history”. That was a reference to the Labour manifesto he concocted that contained nearly every extreme left wing shibboleth you can think of. As a result he crashed to electoral defeat against the Iron Lady. In his youth an outstanding orator he didn’t know when to quit and descended into something of a bumbling shambles and so became something of a figure of fun.
Did anyone else put in LA PLAYA? It is definitely on the sea, and “YA” sounds like a word of appreciation.
Wasn’t held up too long by having BY FOOT and REPEAL and last in was 8 which raised a wry smile
I’m glad I am British: there is a lot of UK-centric stuff here and I think most non-Brits would have struggled. Sorry, chaps! OLDHAM, ON FOOT and APPEAL are cases in point.
Good crossword, though: thank you setter.
JFR
There is not the required “a judge” in the clue, and circa, ca does for about on it’s own.