Financial Times 15,447 by Mudd

Prize puzzle from the Weekend FT of January 14, 2017

I rate this as one of the harder of Mudd’s efforts; 1d in particular gave me a lot of trouble.  My favourites are 13a (TOUCHPAPER) and 19d (RIGHTO).

ACROSS
1 Cushion regularly found on back of beds (6)

SOFTEN – [bed]S + OFTEN (regularly found)
4 Swimmer getting trim doing the backstroke? Then exhausting! (8)

PILCHARD – CLIP (trim) backwards (doing the backstroke?) + HARD (exhausting)
9 A free woman in the family (6)

AUNTIE – A (a) + UNTIE (free)
10 French author’s close to litigious in ribaldry (8)

RACINESS – RACINES (French author’s) + [litigiou]S
12 Light breeze’s ultimate wind say (4)

EASY – [breez]E + anagram (wind) of SAY
13 Clapped out old pickup starts up, the car a bit of a banger? (10)

TOUCHPAPER – anagram (clapped out) of O[ld] P[ickup] UP THE CAR
15 Hopeful to drink a blend of wine that’s stunning (3-9)

AWE-INSPIRING – anagram (a blend of) WINE in ASPIRING (hopeful)
18 Amid awful dread, European queen ending in ecstasy – happy occasion (3-6,3)

RED-LETTER DAY – LETT (European) + ER (queen) together in (amid) anagram (awful) of DREAD + [ecstas]Y
21 100cm OK to be cut off (10)

IMPASSABLE – IM (100cm) + PASS (OK) + ABLE (to be)
22 Giant a wonderful thing when knocked over (4)

MEGA – A (a) + GEM (wonderful thing) all backwards (when knocked over)
24 Female gymnastic event for swimmers (8)

HERRINGS – HER (female) + RINGS (gymnastic event)
25 I offer nothing beyond lust primarily – that’s the urge (6)

LIBIDO – L[ust] + I (I) + BID (offer) + O (nothing)
26 Initial move unconcealed, virgin having lost head (8)

OVERTURE – OVERT (unconcealed) + [p]URE (virgin having lost head)
27 Bum smell in outskirts of Stevenage (6)

SPONGE – PONG (smell) in S[tevenag]E


DOWN
1 ET getting kiss finally, then a quickie (8)

SPACEMAN – [kis]S + PACEMAN (a quickie)
2 Done with it, searched clothes (8)

FINISHED – IN (with it) in (clothes) FISHED (searched)
3 Issue the enemy brought up? (4)

EMIT – TIME (the enemy) reversed (brought up)
5 Elected, a Conservative minister likely to be eviscerated wrongly (12)

INACCURATELY – IN (elected) + A (a) + C (Conservative) + CURATE (minister) + L[ikel]Y
6 Ring round wild ape, circling Antipodean primate (10)

CHIMPANZEE – NZ (Antipodean) in (circling) anagram (wild) of APE in (around) CHIME (ring)
7 Syrian city bitter, power doubly offensive, primarily (6)

ALEPPO – ALE (bitter) + PP (power doubly) + O[ffensive]
8 Walk away from dry land (6)

DESERT – double definition
11 Double trouble around people almost despairing over Greek capital (12)

DOPPELGANGER – anagram of PEOPL[e] + G[reek] together in DANGER (trouble)
14 Kid returns dressed in petticoat (10)

UNDERSKIRT – anagram (dressed) of KID RETURNS
16 Bond, man in tortured Adonis (8)

ADHESION – HE (man) in anagram (tortured) of ADONIS
17 Tree, rotten affair, did you say? (8)

SYCAMORE – homophone (“sick amour”)
19 Nowt lower than One Direction, I agree (6)

RIGHTO – RIGHT (one direction) + O (nowt)
20 Second in reserve, rarely seen (6)

SPARSE – S (second) in SPARE (reserve)
23 Weed was invading my patio, initially (4)

WIMP – W[as] I[nvading] M[y] P[atio]

5 comments on “Financial Times 15,447 by Mudd”

  1. ilippu

    Thanks Pete Maclean and Mudd.

    I found this hard, so much so, I had NW wide open.
    1ac misdirection with ‘regularly’ and staring at 9a, 12a, 1d and 2d didn’t help.

    Didn’t we see a BBC-A for untie, recently? Must file this away.

  2. Malcolm Caporn

    I too was stuck in the NW though I eventually got Auntie and Time as my last two solved. Thank you Pete for the explanations; touchpaper had to fit but I couldn’t work out how, just the “banger” definition. same with Sycamore.
    Typo in 6d. APE not API


  3. Malcolm, Thank you for pointing out that typo. I have made the correction.

    illipu, I don’t recall BBC-A for ‘untie’ but I have seen BBC used in the same kind of way a couple of times.

  4. ilippu

    Pete@3: sorry, I meant the same using shortcuts.

    The last one was in Paul’s prize 27100, due tomorrow; hope this won’t be considered a spoiler.

  5. brucew@aus

    Thanks Mudd and Pete

    Found this entertaining as per normal from this setter with his trademark twists in both word play and definitions. Particularly found his long clues took quite a while to unravel the charades (18a, 6d, 11d) and the anagram of 13a took quite a bit of thought.

    I also ended up in the NW corner with FINISHED (so straightforward after you get it, but fiendishly difficult to get a start on it), EASY (even more so) and SOFTEN (more so again).

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