Financial Times 16,839 by BRADMAN

A typical BRADMAN offering this Friday.

I started from the bottom and worked my way up the grid.. In doing so, several anagrams helped me get off to a speedy start. Thanks, BRADMAN , for the challenge.

FF: 8 DD: 8

ACROSS
1 CHECKS
Rebukes Europeans audibly (6)

sounds like CZECHS ( europeans )

4 SCARIEST
Most frightening street full of decay (8)

ST ( street ) containing CARIES ( decay )

10, 11 SHEPHERDS PURSE
Container for countryman’s bread or plant? (9,5)

SHEPHERD'S ( countryman's) PURSE ( container for bread, money )

12 ANTI
Opponent of important innovation (4)

hidden in "..importANT Innovation"

13 BILL POSTER
One who gives us notice of forthcoming event, say ? (4,6)

cryptic def; notice = BILL

15 LOOKING
Appearing alongside George VI, say, may be WC. (7)

LOO ( may be WC ) KING ( george vi, say )

16 DETACH
Old rocker about to join a companion to become free (6)

DET ( old rocker = TED, reversed ) A CH ( companion )

19 OSWALD
Old king’s assassin (6)

double def; king of northumbria and jfk's killer

21 MAUDLIN
cheesy Chancellor of yesteryear, no good at the end (7)

MAUDLINg ( chancellor of yesteryear, reginald maudling, without G – good at the end )

23 EMERY BOARD
Abrasive firm’s bosses led by old comedian (5,5)

EMERY ( old comedian, dick emery ) BOARD ( firm's bosses )

25 HEMP
Part of garment with soft fibre (4)

HEM ( part of garment ) P ( soft )

27, 28 CHEST PROTECTOR
The correct spot to reposition guard (5,9)

[ THE CORRECT SPOT ]*

29 ELDORADO
Wandering round, adore old place with great wealth (8)

[ ADORE OLD ]* – should be enumerated 2,6?

30 TORRID
Fervent Conservative not entirely clear (6)

TORy ( conservative, not entirely ) RID ( clear )

DOWN
1 CASUALLY
Conservative in guise of upper-class friend having free and easy manner (8)

C ( conservative ) AS U ( in guise of upper-class ) ALLY ( friend )

2 ELECTRONS
Misprint in voting procedures? They are charged (9)

ELECTiONS ( voting procedures, with I changed to R , ~ misprint )

3 KOHL
Make-up of German statesman (4)

double def; helmut kohl

5 CASTLED
Players getting guided made double move in game (7)

CAST ( players ) LED ( guided ) , chess

6 RAPPORTEUR
Investigator has sympathy and regret, being upset (10)

RAPPORT ( sympathy ) EUR ( regret = RUE, reversed )

7 EGRET
Bird in water getting tail up (5)

hidden, reversed in "..waTER GEtting.."

8 THEORY
The men ending with crazy conjecture (6)

THE OR ( men ) Y ( crazY, ending )

9 ERRING
Fish heading off, taking the wrong course (6)

hERRING ( fish, without heading )

14 BINARY STAR
Two shining in a sort of double act? (6,4)

cryptic def

17 COLLECTOR
Officer, university reader who assembles items? (9)

COL ( officer ) LECTOR ( university reader )

18 INSPIRED
Encouraged to rectify sin and pride (8)

[ SIN PRIDE ]*

20 DROOPED
Wilted, being doped or drunk (7)

[ DOPED OR ]*

21 MAROON
Colour of satellite going round sun spinning (6)

MOON ( satellite ) around AR ( sun = RA, reversed )

22 RESCUE
Make secure somehow? (6)

&lit; [ SECURE ]*

24 EMEND
Some sensible men, definitely correct (5)

hidden in ".. sensiblE MEN Definitely.."

26 MEMO
Note this writer being given tick (4)

ME ( this writer ) MO ( tick )

15 comments on “Financial Times 16,839 by BRADMAN”

  1. Enjoyable solve which wasn’t quite as hard as a couple of other offerings elsewhere today, but still with some challenging clues. I was pleased to remember Reginald MAUDLIN(g) but was more annoyed that I missed the EGRET reverse hidden. I agree with you about EL DORADO.

    RAPPORTEUR was an original answer for ‘Investigator’ and I’ve learnt yet another new plant in SHEPHERDS PURSE. Looked it up and apparently it could also have been clued as a “worm killer”. Well I never.

    Thanks to Bradman and Turbolegs

  2. I don’t think that we have 10A/11A here in Australia but once I’d worked out the first word, the second was obvious from the remaining letters.

    The chancellor in 21A was also unknown but the answer was gettable (is that a real word?) from the definition and cross letters. As was 27A/28A once I had guessed the second word: not a phrase that I know.

    22A was very clever.

    Now, back into government enforced lockdown for me.

  3. Thanks for the blog. MAUDLIN is a very odd word but quite correct, I always think it needs to end in a g. I wonder if any other words end with DLIN.
    SHEPHERD’S PURSE is quite an annoying garden weed here but not very invasive.
    RAPPORTEUR is the word used by the UN when they send in an investigator.

  4. Roz@4: My 1995 edition of Chambers back-words for crosswords gives codlin and quodlin, but nothing else (apart from maudlin) up to fifteen letters. Both those words are variants of codling, a variety of elongated apple.

    While I am back in, anyone old enough to remember Reginald Maudling may also remember notices saying “Bill Posters will be prosecuted”, which often attracted the graffito “Bill Posters is innocent”. Sometimes it was Bill Stickers.

  5. Thanks to Bradman for a pleasant solve, with no quibbles and only slight doubt as to OSWALD, since I had forgotten about Lee Harvey…Thanks to Turbolegs for the reminder.

  6. Pelham Barton @6 thank you, very interesting, I will look these up later.
    I remember the Bill Stickers is innocent , in the 1970s I think.

  7. Thanks Bradman for the challenge. I got held up in the SE corner because I had “snap” for 25a with “part of garment” for the definition, “s” for soft, and “nap” for fibre. Favourites were LOOKING, ERRING, MAROON, and RESCUE. Thanks Turbolegs for the blog.

  8. A pleasant solve as we sat enjoying the sunshine. We particularly iked SHEPHERD’S PURSE, CASTLED and MAROON.
    Thanks, Bradman and Turbolegs.
    Peter@2: MAUDLIN is a corruption of Magdalen; its meaning comes from over-sentimental paintings of Mary Magdalen weeping at Christ’s tomb (John 20: 11). And Magdalen College, at both Oxford and Cambridge Universities, is pronounced ‘Maudlin’

  9. allan_c @11. Just to add to the confusion, in Cambridge it is Magdalene college with an E at the end.

  10. Is that a genuine play ? copmus@13
    I did once see a short BBC2 programme called “Bill Stickers is innocent” . It was about people who put up the posters.

  11. Thanks Bradman and Turbolegs
    A single sitting that went much shorter than usual for this setter, so it must have been on the easier end of his spectrum. No real hold-ups and the ones where there was any queries, as in King OSWALD, Reginald MAUDLING, SHEPHERD’S PURSE and RAPPORTEUR were all clearly enough clued to be worked out.
    Finished on the right hand side with MAUDLIN, MAROON and RAPPORTEUR the last few in.

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