Weekend puzzle from the FT of May 20, 2023
My first-in was 13 (FRY) and I quickly solved most of the puzzle then got stuck for a while with 4 blank entries in the top-left. My favourites are 15 (NUB) for its surface, 19 (NONSENSE) for a good hide, 21a (KIMONO), 22 (DRIVEL) and 31 (STREET).
Thank you, Julius.
ACROSS | ||
1 | CACKLE |
Bilge? Little hollow laugh (6)
|
CACK (bilge) + L[ittl]E | ||
4 | SCRABBLE |
Scratch game (8)
|
Double definition | ||
9 | MOB CAP |
Mafia bigwig drops old lady’s headgear (3,3)
|
MOD (Mafia) + CAP[o] (bigwig drops old) | ||
10 | BUMP INTO |
Casually meet Oscar — first, scrounge a beer! (4,4)
|
BUM (scrounge) + PINT (beer) + O (Oscar) | ||
11 | LOLLOP |
Lounge lizard’s first vote: zero returns (6)
|
L[izard] + POLL O (vote zero) backwards (returns). The common meaning of ‘lollop’ is to walk in a bouncy way but it can also mean to lounge. | ||
12 | ABSOLUTE |
Unlimited but also, sadly, ultimately expensive (8)
|
Anagram (sadly) of BUT ALSO + [expensiv]E | ||
13 | FRY |
Cook starters for fiancé, really yummy! (3)
|
F[iance] R[eally] Y[ummy] | ||
14 | TUREEN |
Young person carrying primitive soup bowl (6)
|
UR (primitive) in (carrying) TEEN (young person) | ||
17 | RUBBISH |
Refuse second-class book I submitted in hurry (7)
|
B (second-class) + B (book) + I (I) in (submitted in) RUSH (hurry) | ||
21 | KIMONO |
Julius is working, wearing knockout robe (6)
|
IM ON (Julius is working) in (wearing) KO (knock out) | ||
25 | GNU |
African resident hung around, wasting hour (3)
|
Anagram (around) of [h]UNG | ||
26 | REPAIRED |
Put back together English couple embarrassed to go out (8)
|
E (English) + PAIR (couple) in (to go out) RED (embarrassed) | ||
27 | ODESSA |
Having retired, died without clothing in port city (6)
|
]p]ASSED O[n] (died without clothing) backwards (having retired) | ||
28 | VERIFIED |
Confirmed having struggled to contain swirling blaze (8)
|
Anagram (swirling) of FIRE (blaze) in (to contain) VIED (having struggled) | ||
29 | DOWNER |
Doctor ingesting his personal drug, possibly a barbiturate (6)
|
OWN (his personal) + E (drug) together in (ingesting) DR (doctor) | ||
30 | LUTHERAN |
Protestant university student goes back to Tehran, surprisingly (8)
|
L (student, i.e. learner) + U (university) + anagram (surprisingly) of TEHRAN | ||
31 | STREET |
Way to upset setter? (6)
|
Anagram (to upset) of SETTER | ||
DOWN | ||
1 | COMPLETE |
Finish line? Strive to cross it (8)
|
L (line) in (to cross it) COMPETE (strive) | ||
2 | COBBLERS |
Tripe and iced fruity drinks made with wine (8)
|
Double definition. The second is new to me. | ||
3 | LEAP OVER |
Leave pro to crack vault (4,4)
|
Anagram (to crack) of LEAVE PRO | ||
5 | CHUBBY |
Overweight clubs, partner? (6)
|
C (clubs) + HUBBY (partner) | ||
6 | APPROX |
Ace spin doctor featured in page ten (or thereabouts) (6)
|
A (ace) + PRO (spin doctor) in (featured in) P (page) + X (ten). Is this correct? I would expect ‘spin doctor’ to clue PR, not PRO. | ||
7 | BUNKUM |
15 upset the King? Er, that’s codswallop (6)
|
BUN (15, “nub” upset) + K (the kind) + UM (er) | ||
8 | EXOCET |
Former Officer Commanding Egypt discharged missile (6)
|
EX (former) + CO (officer commanding) + E[gyp]T | ||
12 | ARMBAND |
Captain might have one day to support gun embargo (7)
|
ARM (gun) + BAN (embargo) + D (day) | ||
15 | NUB |
Lump of upside-down cake? (3)
|
BUN (cake) backwards (upside-down) | ||
16 | ASK |
Request time off work (3)
|
[t]ASK (time off work) | ||
18 | HINDMOST |
Spooner’s order to look after publican right at the back (8)
|
Spoonerism of “mind host” | ||
19 | NONSENSE |
Avignon’s ensemble is filled with hot air (8)
|
Hidden word (is filled with) | ||
20 | TOTAL ROT |
Bull tattoo designed to cover both hands (5,3)
|
LR (both hands) in (to cover) anagram (designed) of TATTOO | ||
22 | DRIVEL |
Gibberish instruction to US motorists visiting the UK? (6)
|
DRIVE L[eft] (instruction to US motorists visiting the UK) | ||
23 | SPIRIT |
Tears up case of illicit liquor (6)
|
RIPS (tears) backwards (up) + I[llici]T | ||
24 | PIFFLE |
Garbage heap with leaves at its core (6)
|
FF (leaves, i.e. folios) in (at its core) PILE (heap) | ||
25 | GENEVA |
23 conventions originated here (6)
|
Double definition with the first referring to a type of gin (SPIRIT, from 23d) |
Thanks Pete
I think I threw my copy away accidentally, so I am going on memory.
I was on the same wavelength as the setter this week. I got through it in good time, enjoying both the theme and several of the clues along the way. I remember looking askance at the clue for APPROX, but I do not remember whether I worked out a better way to parse it. I agree with your favourites, and add HINDMOST for its clever spoonerism.
Thanks to you again, and thanks Julius
What a load of ABSOLUTE RUBBISH from Julius, in the best possible way, that is! As I began the grid in the middle, the theme was quickly apparent.
Of all the references to the theme, BUNKUM was a favourite for the wonderfully pungent ‘codswallop’ but COBBLERS was a close second.
Finished in the SW with PIFFLE. Only regret was that there no poppycock!
Great fun as always. Thanks to Julius and Pete
Ah yes, Pete. I see what you and Martyn mean about APPROX. I’ve thrown away the paper so I don’t have my scribbles but I remember thinking PR at the time but PRO for ‘spin doctor’ seems strange, doesn’t it?
Thanks Julius for another fine example of crossword setting. I had a few problems and many favourites. I could not parse ODESSA, I could not solve COBBLERS (when there’s a DD and you don’t know either of them you’re up a creek), and I failed with APPROX. I liked RUBBISH, KIMONO, VERIFIED, ASK (loved its simplicity), TOTAL ROT, and DRIVEL. I also noted that the two far left down clues taken together read COMPLETE DRIVEL, an announcement of the theme. Thanks Pete for the blog.
Thanks, Julius and Pete Maclean!
Enjoyed the puzzle and the blog.
APPROX
‘PRO (Public Relations Officer)=spin doctor’ seems fine to me. I think it has been used before.
Yes, KVa, I’d go along with Public Relations Officer.
Yes. PR is just spin. PRO is spin doctor.
Morecambe & Wise – “What do you think of it so far?” – “RUBBISH”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3ot1HjCRdg
(It’s a two second clip)
Thanks for the blog and KVa for PRO and Tony for the COMPLETE DRIVEL.
Very enjoyable puzzle , great theme used neatly throughout.
COBBLERS , I did not know the drink , I know it as a pudding but most famously from Albert Steptoe.
For VERIFIED I had swirling blaze as FIRE backwards, otherwise it is a very indirect anagram.
Frankie@7 I never click on links but I suspect that Eric is saying RUGGISH , he woud often use props as a ventriloquist’s dummy.
VERIFIED
I agree with your parsing Roz@8.
Always guaranteed some laughs with Julius. The biggest one for me here was when I twigged the theme. Great fun puzzle. I’m with KVa @5 on PRO.
Thanks, Julius and Pete.
The problem with commenting on a crossword that was fairly straightforward a week later is it’s difficult to remember much. I loved the theme, and also failed to parse ODESSA, but I find those clues where I have to take letters off (or add on as a reverse engineering exercise) the most difficult to see.
Thank you to Julius and Pete Maclean.
I can’t think of anything rubbish-y to say, so I’ll just say Julius is a favourite of mine and thanks! {And for a bonus puzzle from another of our FT favourites, I recommend the Jumbo for the holiday weekend, not available on the app but by following the FT link on this site.}
2d reminded me of a favourite moment from watching motor racing on TV. After a driver offered a totally implausible excuse for an accident that was clearly his fault, Martin Brundle commented: “I suppose you’re allowed to talk cobblers if your name is Schumacher ” (Ralf, not Michael, in that instance )