Financial Times 18,102 by GUY

A most enjoyable but tricky puzzle from Guy.

This started very smoothly for me, but I was admittedly held up by a handful of very tricky clues in the end. Still, a very enjoyable and creative puzzle, with some fantastic clues, so many thanks to Guy.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Dealing with front desk has infuriated medics (3,5)
RED CROSS

RE (dealing with) + D[esk] (front) has CROSS (infuriated)

5. Jesus weeps outside quietly (6)
CRIPES

CRIES (weeps) outside P (quietly, musical)

9. Seller happy gripping tool back-to-front (8)
SUPPLIER

UP (happy) + PLIERS (gripping tool, back (S) to front)

10. Chain that’s put on uniform in US? (6)
SIERRA

Cryptic definition
‘US’ translates as ‘Uniform Sierra’ in the NATO alphabet
Sierra is a mountain CHAIN (Sierra Nevada)

12. Appropriate sign-off from affectionate old queen? (5)
ANNEX

ANNE X (sign-off from affectionate old queen)
Anne is your old queen, and she is signing her name with a kiss

13. League trained on playing field once underwater, perhaps (9)
RECLAIMED

L (league) + AIMED (trained) on REC (playing field)

14. Slowly notice silver bits on your computer (6)
ADAGIO

AD (notice) + AG (silver) + IO (bits on your computer, binary code)
Adagio is an Italian musical term

16. Knight turning brown after time could be one of Arthur’s (7)
TRISTAN

SIR< (knight, <turning) + TAN (brown) after T (time)
Tristan is a well-known knight in Arthurian legend

18. Tiny onesie, memory for each son (7)
ROMPERS

ROM (memory) + PER (for each) + S (son)

20. Possible symptom of beetroot consumption showed faintly (6)
PEERED

PEE RED (possible symptom of beetroot consumption)

22. Pile of dodgy cash drunkard on bus finally discovered — nothing taken (5,4)
SLUSH FUND

LUSH (drunkard) on [bu]S (finally) + F[o]UND (discovered, O (nothing) taken)

23. Try a bit of this inexpensive meat (5)
HEART

HEAR (try) + T[his] (a bit of)

24. Proper American stove (6)
PRIMUS

PRIM (proper) + US (American)

25. Sorry about repeatedly employing cliché (8)
CONTRITE

C (about) + ON (about, hence repeatedly) + TRITE (employing cliche)

26. Fish in trouble after angler returns (6)
DORADO

ADO (trouble) after ROD< (angler, <returns)

27. Sulphur is fatal to life on remote planet — what can you do? (5,3)
SKILL SET

S (Sulphur) + KILLS (is fatal) + ET (life in remote planet)

DOWN
1. Delinquent painter reduced proportion of things in picture (6)
RASCAL

RA (painter) + SCAL[e] (proportion of things in picture, reduced)

2. Dame in purdah rueing half-finished novel? (6,2,7)
DAPHNE DU MAURIER

(DAME IN PURDAH RUE[ing] (half-finished))* (*novel) – &lit

3. Calm American airport engineers given contrary order (5)
RELAX

LAX (American airport) + RE (engineers, Royal Engineers) given contrary order (so switch the two elements)

4. State truly worse at sports (5,2)
SWEAR TO

(WORSE AT)* (*sports)

6. Three kings captivated by French queen’s picture again (9)
REIMAGINE

MAGI (three kings) captivated by REINE (French queen)
‘Reine’ is the common noun for ‘queen’ in French language

7. Academic subject exciting campus here at MIT? (4,11)
PURE MATHEMATICS

(CAMPUS HERE AT MIT)* (*exciting)

8. Smart clothes added to professional reputation (8)
STANDING

S[mar]T (clothes) + AND (added to) + ING (professional, engineer’s qualification)

11. Leave jam for singer (4)
SCAT

Double definition

15. Spooner’s cattle fodder turned into meal for dog (9)
GREYHOUND

HAY (cattle fodder) + GROUND (turned into meal) – Spoonerism (switch the starting sounds)

17. Reckless old man breaks album in quarters, temporarily (8)
CRASHPAD

RASH (reckless) + PA (old man) breaks CD (album)

19. Remainder raised objections (4)
STUB

BUTS< (objections, <raised)

20. Security on the door look cold, appreciating blankets brought over (7)
PADLOCK

[loo]K COLD AP[preciating]< (blankets, <brought over)

21. Still reacting to spider? (2,4)
AT REST

Cryptic definition
‘At’ is the preposition indicating ‘reacting to’, and a spider is a physical rest in a game of snooker

23. Henry expected money for selling large place with many bedrooms (5)
HOTEL

H (Henry) + OTE (expected money for selling, on-target earnings) + L (large)

19 comments on “Financial Times 18,102 by GUY”

  1. Parsed 8d as Simon @2. Although I find Guy’s crosswords quite hard, I do enjoy them immensely due to the innovative clueing. Lots to enjoy here.

  2. I agree with SimonS@2 on STANDING.
    I do not understand the parsing suggested for AT REST, even with the snooker slang explanation? How is “at” = “reacting to”?
    I did not see the hidden word for PADLOCK, and just guessed from the crossers.

  3. Thanks Guy and Oriel

    8dn: I was with Simon@2 and other commenters. To clarify, I took “professional” as part of the definition – as I am sure others did.

    21dn: Collins 2023 p 123 has at¹ prep7 used to indicate the object of an emotion: angry at the driver; shocked at his behaviour“. That just about works for me as “reacting to”. Incidentally, “spider” is not slang, but the regular name for a piece of equipment used in billiards and snooker.

  4. Only a couple of nho bits — the fish and the ote acronym — so not sure why I took ages staring dumbly at this in places: peered, contrite, skillset, pure maths and crashpad in particular. Nothing fiendish about any of ’em. Hey ho, enjoyed it nonetheless, ta Guy and Oriel.

  5. PB@5: If it is what I think it is, I would have called it a “bridge,” but I claim zero expertise. Thanks for the other information, but the clue is still unintelligible to me.

  6. Grimly Fiendish, for me.
    Very much, the top-end of my solving ability, and I hate to say it, but some of the clues/wordplays/ solutions, do not seem clever, but forced.
    So, ( for me….BUT most others will disagree ) , some pretty naff surfaces, too.
    If, “Leave jam for singer”, is your kind of clue ( 11 dwn) SCAT, then fair enough.
    If you have heard of “OTE”, as ” on target earnings”, fair enough.
    CRASHPAD, ditto, but for me, pretty rubbish.
    If HEART clicks, for “inexpensive meat”, 23(ac), fair enough.

    I really like this setter, but this puzzle is far too contrived/ clumsy, and one that I did not enjoy.
    I can feel the knives in my back, already.
    But, thanks, Guy & Oriel

  7. 21dn revisited: I took this as simply AT (reacting to) + REST (spider?). The definition for AT is discussed in comment 5, and “spider?” is a definition by example. Collins 2023 p 1910 has spider n9 billiards, snooker a rest having long legs, used to raise the cue above the level of the height of the ball”.

  8. Thank you Guy for the crossword.

    I did not parse SIERRA. Guessed it from the crossers, but the explanation is neat. Thank you Oriel for the blog.

  9. Thanks Guy. I found this difficult & not always enjoyable. I revealed a handful that just baffled me — SIERRA, RECLAIMED, RASCAL, & SWEAR TO. My favourites were REIMAGINE, STANDING, & my COTD, PURE MATHEMATICS. Thanks Oriel for parsing this bear.

  10. Quite tough, but we got everything except SIERRA, for which we needed a wordfinder and then couldn’t parse. But we found the clue for 19dn ambiguous, needing crossing letters to establish if the answer was STUB or BUTS.
    Thanks, Guy and Oriel.

  11. I got there, but it took a couple of trips. Sierra was my LOI, not because I hadn’t thought of the answer much earlier but because it took ages for the parsing and definition pennies to suddenly drop. Doh.

    Guy is a very clever setter whom I generally enjoy, although today I found some of the clues slightly more contrived than usual. Rather too many where I worked out the answer from the definition or the crossers and then struggled away to understand the parsing.

    I’d always thought Rompers was the plural. A Romper. Two Rompers.

    Those of us brought up watching pot black in the early days of colour television will fondly remember the appearance of a Spider.

  12. I too found this difficult, with the large % of charades raising the level of the challenge and making it a bit monotonous. I agree a few clues seemed overly complicated and contrived. Favourites and clues where I struggled have already been mentioned.

    Thanks Guy and Oriel

  13. E.N.Boll& @8. Come now, this is the FT! Of course OTE is appropriate. And of course CRASHPAD works for an unaccountably affluent financial audience. This is their world Guy’s writing for.
    (Not sure about front desk though.)

  14. 1ac further to Guy@17: Thank you Guy for dropping in. It took me a while to work out what you meant. If I have it right, the indicator for D should be read as “[the] front [that the word] desk has”. You are not claiming “front desk” on its own as the indicator for the first letter of the word “desk”.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.