Financial Times 18,068 by MUDD

A fun gentle challenge from MUDD today

 

FF: 9 DD: 7

Apologies for the dodgy format. More technical problem


ACROSS
1 Dismiss people in traditional event (4,4)   SACK RACE   SACK ( dismiss ) RACE ( people )
5 Booze cruises returning having nabbed last of Martini (6)   SPIRIT   { reverse of TRIPS ( cruises ) } containing I ( martinI, last letter )
9 Later, I screwed on link (8)   RELATION   [ LATER I ]* ON
10 Entering empty stage, drunk can’t stand (6)   STANCE   SE ( StagE, without inner content ) containing [ CANT ]*
12 Separate strip for game (9)   PARTRIDGE   PART ( separate ) RIDGE ( strip )
13 Perfume dispatched, by the sound of it?   SCENT   sounds like SENT ( dispatched )
14 Finished again (4)   OVER   double def
16 Air about tease in old Roman official (7)   TRIBUNE   TUNE ( air ) around RIB ( taunt )
19 Two-star building almost certainly better? (2,5)   AT WORST   [ TWO STAR ]*
21 How I might mark present I’d bought for myself, a book (4)   TOME   cryptic def; read as TO ME ( how i would address a gift to myself )
24 African animal, thing seen in middle of Sahara (5)   HYENA   YEN ( thing ) in HA ( saHAra, middle of )
25 Bird found refuse on Scottish island (9)   CHAFFINCH   CHAFF ( refuse ) INCH ( scottish island )
27 Something dried is covered in something wet (6)   RAISIN   IS in RAIN ( something wet )
28 Pretty appropriate (8)   BECOMING   double def
29 Type of bend, cocker’s cocker? (6)   DOGLEG   DOG ( cocker ) LEG ( cocker )
30 Not out, aunt has been abroad (8)   UNBEATEN   [ AUNT BEEN ]*; cricket terminology
         
DOWN        
1 5 Across a little closer, a phantom (6)   SERAPH   hidden in “..cloSER A PHantom”
2 Salad ingredient, speed of thought has it removed (6)   CELERY   CELERitY ( speed of thought, without letters of IT )
3 Turner in rust and gold (5)   ROTOR   ROT ( rust ) OR ( gold )
4 Food has tipped over beetroot soup (7)   CHOWDER   CHOW ( food ) DER ( reverse of RED, beetroot )
6 Metal vessel a problem, silicon contained (9)   POTASSIUM   POT ( vessel ) A [ SUM ( problem ) containing SI ( silicon ) ]
7 Athlete ahead, one won’t quite finish ahead! (6-2)   RUNNER UP   RUNNER ( athlete ) UP ( ahead )
8 Contracts erode in taxes (8)   TREATIES   EAT ( erode ) in TRIES ( taxes )
11 Port not drunk? (4)   LEFT   cryptic def
15 Multi-talented relatives dancing around   VERSATILE   [ RELATIVES ]*
17 Article probing poor grade, understood   GATHERED   THE ( article ) in [ GRADE ]*
18 Little nail pierces covering of something wide (8)   SWEEPING   [ WEE ( little ) PIN ( nail ) ] in SG ( SomethinG, end characters )
20 Tiny arachnid bit (4)   TICK   double def
21 Business arrangement where debt halved in sequence of events (5-2)   TRADE-IN   DE ( half of DEbt ) in TRAIN ( sequence of events )
22 Sign up with squiggly lines on bottom of parchment (6)   ENLIST   [ LINES ]* T ( parchmenT, last letter )
23 Old Japanese leader, one having abandoned development of housing (6)   SHOGUN   [ HOUSiNG ( without I – one ) ]*
26 Fahrenheit zero, unfortunately, became very cold (5)   FROZE   F ( Fahrenheit ) [ ZERO ]*

12 comments on “Financial Times 18,068 by MUDD”

  1. A lovely, gentle puzzle from Mudd with lots of succinct, neatly worded surfaces including SACK RACE, for one or fun riddles like those for RAISIN and DOGLEG.
    Other ticks were… TICK, STANCE and LEFT.
    Very entertaining. Thanks Mudd and Turbolegs, notwithstanding the dodgy format!

  2. Haven’t seen celerity for ages, same root as ac celer ate I guess, so probably not exclusively “.. of thought”, but hey ho. Becoming, for behaviour, is usually un-, and, for looks, a bit like fetching. Nice cruiae from Mudd and Turbo, for which tiring ginf brain gives thanks.

  3. Much easier than Paul in the Guardian today. I initially had MITE for 20d, which seems to work nearly as well as TICK (mite = a very small amount, as in “the widow’s mite”, as well as another arachnid).

  4. Thanks for the blog , neat and concise clues and SHOGUN managed to avoid the shotgun for once .
    Cineraria@6 you are right , the cocker (spaniel) cocks his leg , so a cocker’s cocker is a dog leg .

  5. Thanks Mudd and Turbolegs

    2dn: Chambers 2016 p 251 gives “rapidity of motion or thought” as a definition of celerity, so at worst it is an unsignalled definition by example.

  6. Thanks Mudd, that was fun. My favourites were SACK RACE, OVER, LEFT, SHOGUN, and RAISIN. In UNBEATEN, I wondered about ‘has’ separating the fodder, AUNT & BEEN but I guess an arguement can be made justifying this. Thanks Turbolegs for the blog.

  7. Not quite our quickest solve as we were puzzled for ages by the ‘has’ separating ‘aunt’ and ‘been’ in 30ac, and in 8dn we initially thought of ‘tithes’ for ‘taxes’. Otherwise very straightforward and enjoyable. We liked PARTEIDGE and CHAFFINCH.
    Thanks, Mudd and Turbolegs.

  8. My thoughts correspond closely to what has already been written – I even had the same cocker question as Cineraria@5, and also entered MITE initially for 20d.

    My summary: an enjoyable set of approachable, and well-crafted clues.

    Thanks Mudd, Turbolegs and all

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