Financial Times 17,913 by GUY

A challenging puzzle from GUY that I made very heavy weather of.

FF: 7 DD: 9

ACROSS
1 CONGREGATE
Dupe with 35 year-old car at European rally (10)

CON ( dupe ) GREG ( 35 year old car ) AT E ( european )

6 INTO
A fan of Guy, not surprisingly (4)

I ( guy ) [ NOT ]*

9 TRIGGER
Time ship’s fitter set off (7)

T ( time ) RIGGER ( ship's fitter )

10 RECOUNT
Tell tot again (7)

double def

12 OBITUARIST
One epitomising life after death? (10)

cryptic def

13 RUE
Hearing Joey, perhaps wish otherwise (3)

sounds like ROO ( joey )

15 ADRIFT
Purposeless commercial break (6)

AD ( commercial ) RIFT ( break )

16 SUPERLOO
Pool user adjusted self-cleaning facility (8)

[ POOL USER ]*

18 MARBELLA
Resort a beautiful stone city, with English moving in (8)

MARBLE ( beautiful stone ) LA ( city ) with E moving to the left

20 PIMPLE
Spot solicitor outside in lane (6)

PIMP ( solicitor ) LE ( LanE, outer letters )

23 NET
Clear goal (3)

double def

24 TRILATERAL
Experimental hosts tonight having three parties (10)

TRIAL ( experimental ) containing LATER ( tonight )

26 EVIDENT
Obvious one’s over depression (7)

[ reverse of I'VE ( one's ) ] DENT ( depression )

27 O CANADA
National anthem of Chad? Oddly, nothing (1, 6)

O CA ( odd letters of " ..Of ChAd.." ) NADA ( nothing )

28 PREY
Victim’s appeal heard (4)

sounds like PRAY ( appeal )

29 FRUSTRATED
Maybe Cherries scored, making one son dissatisfied (10)

FRUiT ( maybe cherries ) RATED ( scored ) with I ( one ) changing to S ( son )

DOWN
1 CUTE
Clever to switch off energy (4)

CUT ( switch off ) E ( energy )

2 NAIL BAR
New trouble with lawyers limited beauty salon (4,3)

N ( new ) AIL ( trouble ) BAR ( lawyers )

3 RIGHT-OF-CENTRE
Spooner’s view of tenant is slightly conservative (5-2-6)

spoonerism of SIGHT OF RENTER ( view of tenant )

4 GERMAN
United managers partly like Klopp or Tuchel? (6)

reverse anagram? [ AS ( like ) + GERMAN ]* = MANAGERS

5 TERMINUS
Second half for Exeter without end (8)

TER ( exeTER, second half of ) MINUS ( without )

7 NEUTRAL
Taking no side in war, nervous about the end of it (7)

NEURAL ( nervous ) around T ( iT, last letter )

8 ON THE ROPES
About to be beaten, won’t hero pester guards? (2,3,5)

hidden in "..wONT HERO PESter.."

11 CATHERINE PARR
Widow of a king potentially making a parent richer (9,4)

[ A PARENT RICHER ]*

14 SALMON LEAP
Waterfall swimmers must get up, a small one flowing quietly (6,4)

[ A SMALL ONE ]* P ( quietly )

17 CLOISTER
A hundred lurk around small silent arcade (8)

C ( hundred ) [ LOITER ( lurk ) around S ( small ) ]

19 RATLINE
Step on a rope-ladder right next to field (7)

R ( right ) AT ( next to ) LINE ( field )

21 PEASANT
Poor countryman hunted birds, saving hearts (7)

PhEASANT ( hunted birds ) without H – hearts

22 BARONS
Peers rule out going back to basics (6)

BAR ( rule out ) ON ( going ) S ( basicS, last letter )

25 PAID
Discharged one day after a year (4)

PA ( a year ) I ( one ) D ( day )

13 comments on “Financial Times 17,913 by GUY”

  1. Thanks for the G-reg, KVa! (1990 was the year I left the UK so I didn’t remember that though my father has perfect recall of these things!)
    I did find this tough-going but was determined to finish – which I did after a few alphabet trawls! I learned (and guessed) RATLINE.
    My favourite was O CANADA and I had ticks for SALMON LEAP, RUE, PIMPLE and INTO.
    Thanks for a stern workout, Guy, and Turbolegs for a great blog.

  2. Thanks, Turbolegs, for explaining 29A. The answer was obvious from the cross letters but I didn’t get the “cherries” bit. I assumes that it must have been a reference to some sporting team – my weak subject.

    Similarly, 16A (superloo), was unknown but gettable from the cross letters and the anagram. Is this a male thing? Or an English thing?

    Finally, 19D (ratline) was also unknown to me and so remained unsolved. I have never climbed a rope ladder. Why does “line” mean “field”?

  3. A fan of Guy, surprisingly?
    My first tussle with this setter, ( I think ), and half-way through, I was certainly 29(ac) and 8(down).
    On completing, I realised what an expert piece of compiling this puzzle is……”tough but fair”, sums it up.
    No tedious cross-dependent solutions; no obscurities, in wordplay, answers, or general knowledge.
    Not even a scent of French/ Latin/ German ( except for Messrs. Klopp & Tuchel…and what a cunning clue that is!).

    Classic cryptic compiling….my kind of guy.

    And to round it off, great blog from Turbolegs, cheers.

  4. Well done to those who spotted the correct parse for GERMAN. I had a much weaker ‘managers partly’ contributing the MAN and the GER with ‘united’ putting those two together. I am not surprised that Guy’s intent was something both more rigorous and more elegant. As others have said, a very smooth puzzle, ingeniously constructed with some lovely surfaces and avoiding some rather too-obvious constructions. A pleasure from nose to tail. I didn’t solve OBITUARIST or parse BARONS but that’s my bad. Faves included ADRIFT, SUPERLOO and EVIDENT for the surfaces, O CANADA which is simply delightful, a ‘proper’ Spoonerism in RIGHT OF CENTRE, two more lovely surfaces in TERMINUS and ON THE ROPES, a lovely anagram spot for CATHERINE PARR and the closing, delightful simple yet effective PAID.

    Thanks Guy and Turbolegs.

  5. Guy is fast becoming one of my favourite setters, even when I can’t quite finish without help. PostMark has highlighted some of the delights. As one old enough to have owned a G-Reg car, I choose CONGREGATE as my favourite.

  6. PostMark@9
    I had “wayward” parsings on both GERMAN , and BARONS, so I completed only with a couple of flukes.
    So, my bad, too.
    Totally agree with your summary.

  7. I’ll go along with Petert – I too am getting to be quite a 6ac – and PostMark (thanks for doing the hard work!).

    My only quiblet was tonight = LATER?

    Thanks to Guy and Turbolegs, especially for the parsing of BARONS.

  8. We couldn’t understand ‘greg’ in CONGREGATE or parse GERMAN; otherwise this was fairly straightforward if challenging. We liked 29ac for the ‘Cherries scored’ misdirection.
    Thanks, Guy and Turbolegs.

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