Financial Times 18,377 by GAFF

My apologies. This is dreadful. I’m standing in for today and it completely slipped my mind until late in the morning. Then I had trouble with the software and after almost completing the crossword it froze on me and I had to start all over again. But I’ve at least just about finished (the ones I’m unsure about I hope I’ll manage as I finish this off, or at any rate you will I’m sure help me with). To make it worse, I was very slow to finish this since I had MINICAB at 5dn.

Triplejumper@1 tells us this crossword is related to Cher.

Definitions underlined in crimson. Anagrams indicated *(like this) or (like this)*.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 TRAMPS
Walks slope between treacherous edges (6)
t(ramp)s — t and s are the edges of treacherous
5 THIEVES
Mid-sixties man’s captured yesterday’s robbers (7)
[six]t[ies], then his around eve = yesterday (does eve really = yesterday?). {I had he’s for man’s and that gave me an incomprehensible iev}
9 AVIATRIX
A way to quote magic pilot (8)
a via “tricks” — the homophone indicated by ‘to quote’
10 URGENT
Pressing your gentle heart (6)
Hidden in yoUR GENTle
11 WARM-UP
Preparation for heat (4-2)
2 defs, warm-up and warm up
12 CLEANING
Cheerleading not straight chore (8)
c leaning — does cheerleading = cheer leading?
14 TURN BACK TIME
Visit the past to watch activity in Spring (4,4,4)
we turn our watches back in Spring (no we don’t, surely) so facetiously it could be called turn back time
18 DANCING QUEEN
Perhaps twisting piece of Swedish song (7,5)
The twist is a dance; piece = queen (as in chess)
22 AGNUS DEI
Prayer is idea sung at sea (5,3)
(idea sung)*
25 IGUANA
Lizard again desperately held to be fashionable (6)
(again)* holding U — not sure U = fashionable
26 GAUCHO
Centre of storm becomes close for inept rancher (6)
gauche = inept, and its close (ie last letter) becomes [st]o[rm]
27 TAHITIAN
Islander gives thanks for strike by Botham (8)
ta hit Ian — Ian Botham, now Lord Botham
28 GYPSIES
Wanderers in dodgy 5s (7)
Hidden in dodGY SOMEthing I think, but I can’t see this I’m afraid — perhaps it’s just a CD and gypsies wander in dodgy taxicabs (??) [Thanks TonyC@2: in NYC unlicensed cabs are Gypsy cabs]
29 DEEPLY
Thoroughly makes river work (6)
Dee ply
DOWN
2 REVEAL
Explain extremely rare meat (6)
r[ar]e veal
3 MIASMATIC
Contagious diseased mathematicians Neath expelled (9)
*(m[athe]maticia[n]s) — viewed askance in some quarters because the letters of neath aren’t in order in mathematicians
4 SCRAP IRON
Old metal set to decrease (5,4)
set = scrap somehow, decrease must be read as de-crease, or iron (as in ironing shirts) [TonyC has a better parsing: set-to = scrap. But then shouldn’t Gaff have had a hyphen, which would have mucked up the wordplay?]
5 TAXICAB
Hackneyed conveyance that takes its toll (7)
CD relying on the fact that a taxicab is a Hackney cab and it takes a fare (toll)
6 INURE
Support to train people that is out of season (5)
The NUR, the National Union of Railwaymen, can be seen as a support for train people, and NUR has ie (that is) outside it
7 VEGAN
Some leave gangly animal free (5)
hidden in leaVE GANgly
8 SYNONYMS
Substitutes for setters (8)
CD: for someone who is setting a crossword a synonym = a word substitute
13 AUK
A British bird? (3)
a UK — the question mark because it isn’t a British bird?
15 CHERISHED
Treasured riches he’d assembled (9)
(riches he’d)*
16 TONGUE-TIE
Language to secure silence (6-3)
tongue (= language), tie (= secure) — silence as a verb
17 BANG BANG
Expel sports team over allowing novice gunman to start shooting (4,4)
ban GB a[llowing] n[ovice] g[unman]
19 IOS
Son follows satellite phone operator (3)
Io s — iOS (Apple) — Io is a moon of Jupiter
20 QUIETUS
Death could silence Trump and his people (7)
quiet US
21 ENTAIL
Require department to suff er (6)
ENT ail — the Ear, Nose and Throat department — my copy has suff er but I suspect this is just a misprint
23 UNCAP
Remove top and a lot of paunch wobbles (5)
(paunc[h])*
24 DHOTI
Leaders from Delhi have only tailored Indian cloth (5)
First letters — a bit unsatisfactory because some words are needed for both definition and wordplay

4 comments on “Financial Times 18,377 by GAFF”

  1. TripleJumper

    And of course Cher is 80 today. The puzzle contains a few of her singles and the album DANCING QUEEN.
    UNCAP made me chuckle.
    Thanks to GAFF and John

  2. tonyc

    Good morning from NYC. I think 4D can be parsed as scrap = set-to and de(-)crease = iron. As to 28 A, in NYC, unlicensed cabs are Gypsy cabs.

  3. Pelham Barton

    14ac: Of course, we turn watches or clocks back one hour in Autumn if we can, but I was taught as a child to wind the hands forward 11 hours to avoid damaging the mechanism. Indeed, my radio controlled clock goes forward 11 hours without any intervention from me, and the clock on my central heating has to be adjusted manually, and I have to go forward 23 hours.

    28ac: Thanks tonyc, but the clue still appears to be defective as 5s could refer either to 5dn or to 5ac: in the latter case it would be seriously racist.

    3dn should cause no problems: the anagram can be formed first, “diseased mathematicians” giving MIASMATIC NEATH, and then the letters of “Neath” are in the right order to be removed.

  4. SM

    I did not spot the anniversary . TURN BACK TIIME,GYPSIES and THIEVES were some of her other hits.CHER is hidden in 15d.
    Thanks to TripleJumper @1 for spotting the anniversary , John for the blog under challenging circumstances and Gaff for an entertaining puzzle.

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