Financial Times 15,963 by REDSHANK

A typical workout from Redshank, thanks to whom for setting a solid challenge. In my opinon, one of the more balanced crosswords I have solved recently, being not too easy and not too difficult .

FF:9 DD: 8

The pangram should be called out here.

completed grid
Across
1 CARILLON Bells ring round parish centre, one nonstop (8)
[CALL (ring) round RI (paRIsh, centre)] ONe (nonstop i.e. without last letter)
5 STRING Fraud involving royal racehorses (6)
STING (fraud) containing R (royal)
10 AERATED Beer with no heart judged to have a head? (7)
AlE (beer, without heart i.e. without central character) RATED (judged)
11 IMPIOUS Unholy pope identifies himself, clutching ring (7)
I’M PIUS (pope identifies himself) containing O (ring)
12 BETEL Nut in car picked up (5)
sounds like BEETLE (car, vw)
13 NIETZSCHE Creator of Superman, champion wearing size ten pants (9)
CH (champion) in [SIZE TEN]* – wiki here
14 FOURTH ESTATE Press university to enter for the country (6,6)
U (uniersity) in [FOR THE STATE (country) ]
18 FECKLESSNESS Incompetence not a trait of Mrs Brown’s Boys? (12)
cryptic def; i understand ‘feck’ as an expletive was oft used in the tv show, mrs brown’s boys
21 PHOSPHATE Eccentric posh priest loathing salt (9)
POSH* P (priest) HATE (loathing)
23 ERATO She inspires poetry moderator to some extent (5)
hidden in “..modERATOr..”
24 STAMINA Endurance’s mainmast shattered, all except top (7)
mAINMAST(without top i.e without first letter)
25 LEAFLET Tract that appears in spring (7)
double def? cryptic def; a leaflet is part of a compound leaf
26 ELEVEN Team takes part in gospel evening (6)
hidden in “..gospEL EVENing” (related to cricket)
27 ORTHODOX Conformist Dorothy endlessly trained to slice beef (8)
DOROTHy* in OX (beef)
Down
1 CRABBY Taxi driver circling King’s Cross (6)
CABBY (taxi driver) around R (king)
2 RARITY It’s hard to find it within artillery lines (6)
IT in [ RA (artillery, royal) RY (lines, RailwaY) ]
3 LITTLE OWL Flyer’s short unaspirated cry (6,3)
LITTLE (short) hOWL (cry, unaspirated)
4 ORDINARY SEAMAN Mariner’s on a day off – this one? (8,6)
MARINERS ON A DAY*
6 TOPAZ Best street guide’s a gem (5)
TOP (best) AZ (street guide)
7 IRONCLAD Rigid Conservative blocked Maggie’s sobriquet briefly (8)
C (conservative) in [IRON LADy (maggie, margaret thatcher’s sobriquet) ]
8 GAS METER Fuel holder, nothing left but a measuring device (3,5)
GASoMETER (fuel holder, without O – nothing) – i feel like i have seen this clue very recently
9 VICE CHANCELLOR Opportunity to wind up after failing college boss (4,10)
[CHANCE (opportunity) LLOR (wind = ROLL, reversed)] after VICE (failing)
15 SASSENACH Birches raised in small wood for English person (9)
SENAC (birches = CANES, reversed) in [ S (small) ASH (wood) ] – didnt know this word before, and apparently not a very polite one ..
16 OFF-PISTE Fife’s top resort, where snow’s deeper (3-5)
FIFES TOP*
17 ACCOLADE A pat on the back or a touch on the shoulder? (8)
doubel def; act of bestowing knighthood
19 BALLAD Song and dance promotion (6)
BALL (dance) AD (promotion)
20 VORTEX Get angry about men beginning to thump spinner (6)
VEX (angry) around [ OR (men) T (beginning to Thump) ]
22 PRICE Unnamed royal scion’s quotation (5)
PRInCE (royal scion, without N – name)

*anagram

7 comments on “Financial Times 15,963 by REDSHANK”

  1. Usually find Redshank straightforward but, for some reason, I really struggled with this. Maybe my mind’s not in gear. Guessed ACCOLADE (my LOI) and had to look it up to find the second meaning. Have seen CARILLON before but couldn’t dredge it out of memory. Glad the cryptic reading helped me spell NIETZSCHE. Noticed ‘superman’ in today’s Guardian. Is there some reason perhaps?

    Thanks to Redshank and Turbolegs.

  2. I like this setter. But I came a cropper today. hadnt seen Mrs Brown’s Boys and didnt have time to check so….mistake there causing another mistake in 17.Otherwise fine.(if it had been Rather Ted it would have been different)

     

    Thanks Redshank and turbo.

  3. Actually, Sassenach is the Gaelic for Saxon and applies to any lowlander, on whichever side of the border he lives. It’s not really rude (we call them Teuchtars)

  4. Thanks Redshank and Turbolegs

    Enjoyable puzzle as ever from this setter that took a couple of sessions to get out and needed some additional help to learn about NIETZSCHE’s ‘Superman’ and the FECKLESSNESS of Mrs Brown’s Boys (which I had never heard of).

    Finished with LEAFLET (clever clue), RARITY (which I found harder than I should have) and CARILLON (which I had to confirm meant bells) as the last few in.

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