Times Quick Cryptic 700 by Teazel

8 minutes. I was looking for something here to mark the occasion of the 700th Quick Cryptic but haven’t been able to find anything special, just another excellent puzzle, perhaps a little easier than on most days last week. Here’s my blog…

As usual definitions are underlined in bold italics, {deletions are in curly brackets} and [anagrinds, containment, reversal and other indicators in square ones]

Across
1 Striker in game (5)
MATCH – A double definition of sorts but I’d say the first is more of a cryptic hint
7 Bringer of information one can run off (9)
ANNOUNCER – Anagram [off] of ONE CAN RUN
9 Look threatening in small hood (5)
SCOWL – S (small), COWL (hood)
10 Working for oneself, run through payment, clean out (9)
FREELANCE – R (run) inside [through] FEE (payment), anagram [out] of CLEAN
11 Heads for the early afternoon refreshment (3)
TEA – First letters [heads] of T{he} E{arly], A{fternoon}
12 Plant lies tangled with weeds (9)
EDELWEISS – Anagram [tangled] of LIES WEEDS. “Bless my homeland for ever”.
14 Safe to go round cupola, counting steps with this? (9)
PEDOMETER – PETER (safe) goes round DOME (cupola). A trickier clue that requires the solver to have two pieces of GK. “Peter” for “safe” comes up regularly in cryptics and is well worth remembering.
16 Fool put 11 in it (3)
MUG – A straight definition and a cryptic one referring back to “tea” at 11ac. Clues in Times puzzles don’t often refer to other answers; the Guardian is the place to go for that sort of thing.
18 Sort of music / from Ancient Rome? (9)
CLASSICAL – A straight definition and a cryptic hint with reference to Roman traditions and culture.
20 Be discriminatory in absence of head (5)
EXIST – {s}EXIST (discriminatory) [ in absence of head]
21 Disciples look back, covered in blossoms (9)
FOLLOWERS –  LO (look) reversed [back] inside [covered in] FLOWERS (blossoms)
22 Opera performer finally fails, becoming char (5)
SINGE – SINGE{r} (opera performer) [finally fails]
Down
1 One bringing luck calm finally on racecourse (6)
MASCOT – {cal}M [finally],  ASCOT (racecourse)
2 Two personal weapons used with utmost vigour (5,3,4)
TOOTH AND NAIL – TOOTH AND NAIL (two personal weapons)
3 Holiday, or several weeks at school? (4-4)
HALF-TERM – A straight definition and a cryptic one
4 Woman houses old lover in extension (6)
ANNEXE – ANNE (woman) contains [houses] EX (old lover)
5 Expected large fight (4)
DUEL – DUE (expected), L (large)
6 Underwear barrister receives (6)
BRIEFS – A straight definition with a cryptic hint
8 Religious rite gives assurance (12)
CONFIRMATION – Two straight definitions
13 Sort of network criminal relies on entering borders of Wales (8)
WIRELESS –  Anagram [criminal] of RELIES entering W{ale}S [borders of]
14 Get calm fast, if cuddled (6)
PACIFY – PACY (fast) with IF inside it [cuddled]
15 Label: approve it, we hear (6)
TICKET –  TICK (approve), sounds like [we hear] “it”
17 Mild contribution to urgent letter (6)
GENTLE – Hidden [contribution to] {ur}GENT LE{tter}
19 Fruit is late, we hear (4)
SLOE – Sounds like [we hear] “slow” (late). I’m not convinced that “slow” and “late” mean the same thing.

13 comments on “Times Quick Cryptic 700 by Teazel”

  1. Celebrated in 8.27 with COD 20ac EXIST

    Heartily agree re- slow and late being interchangeable – they are not quite the same.

    WOD EDELWEISS

  2. I’ve done easier QCs but this was okay for a Monday. I would’ve been under 10 minutes if I hadn’t stopped to try and work out why “peter” might mean “safe”.
  3. Steady but slow, and I’m not quite sure why. Not knowing HALF-TERM helped some, and trying to get ‘gen’ into 7ac (and missing the anagrind) did its part. I also resisted putting in CLASSICAL because it seemed so weak. 8:21.
  4. About an hour.

    COD 15d Ticket.

    The last three took ages to go in:
    18a, easy on reflection.
    2d tooth and nail. Made harder because there were only 2 checking letters for tooth.
    19d sloe.

    Couldn’t parse 14a pedometer so thanks for the blog.
    Safe/Peter has been added to the (expanding)list.

  5. Made really hard work of this, finishing in 40 minutes. For ages, I just couldn’t see 18ac, 19ac and 15dn. 22ac also held me up somewhat as I was convinced I was looking for an Opera performer. 2dn wasn’t the most straightforward either. I’d say this was towards the trickier end for the QC, but I’m probably in the minority here. Gribb.
    1. I managed quite well and finished in 25 minutes. I could not parse pedometer and I read that Peter is Safe but I do not know why.
      1. It’s one of those things, silverwaver, OED has that it’s crimnal slang for: A safe or cash box; a cash register, a till. Their earliest example is dated 1827.
  6. 8′ 31″, a bit slow, as spent time on MUG and hence CONFIRMATION LOI. People think 12ac is the Austrian national anthem, but it was written for the show. Thanks jack and Teazel.
  7. I got off to a flier with plenty going in at first glance, slowed down a bit in the middle before getting bogged down with my last 2 in, 2d and 19d – for some reason I still find homonyms a real struggle. Finally completed in 22 minutes with all successfully parsed, except for the previously unknown peter/safe definition.
  8. About 18 minutes for me, but I hardly slept last night, so I’m feeling quite slow in general. Knew all the vocab. Beginners might want pre-emptively to add “peterman” for a safecracker alongside “peter” to their list of oddities that come up occasionally. LOI SLOE.
  9. Really struggled with the bottom half so a DNF for me today. However, once the blog had fed me 14d and 19d then the rest just slipped in. My first DNF for ages.
  10. I solved this on a train to Bournemouth this morning. It seemed rather tricky,as if some of Saturday’s puzzle had leaked into Monday’s QC. Train-induced sleepiness did not help. Worried by all the blanks, I bunged in Bag for 16a. Edelwiss was a big help and I was making good progress by Basingstoke, but struggling on a lot of clues. LOI was 8d as the Bag was really off-putting. All done by Winchester. Had seen Peter before in a crossword. David
  11. Dislike Peter=Safe. When do these old chestnuts get retired? Not clever clueing in my opinion.

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