Financial Times 18,264 by Rosa Klebb

Puzzle from the Weekend FT of January 10, 2026

I found this a bit harder than most of Rosa’s puzzles and as good as ever. I particularly like 15 (CAYMAN ISLANDS), 12 (FARTHEST) and 16 (ALCATRAZ).  Thank you, Rosa.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
7 BORE
Gave birth and tolerated pain well, for an Aussie (4)
Double definition. ‘Bore’ is an Australian term for an artesian well
8 COLLATERAL
Gather article in both hands for security (10)
COLLATE (gather) + A (article) in (in) R L (both hands)
10 GENERA
Classes are laid back, on dope (6)
GEN (dope) + ARE (are) backwards (laid back)
11 GOOD-TIME
Pleasure-seeking couple entertaining male on welfare (4-4)
GOOD (welfare) + M (male) in (entertaining) TIE (couple)
12 FARTHEST
Utmost of these briefly stopping Trump (8)
THES[e] in (stopping) FART (trump)
13 SOLEMN
Single chap, discontented and glum (6)
SOLE (single) + M[a]N (chap discontented)
15 CAYMAN ISLANDS
Many scandals about to engulf international tax haven (6,7)
I (international) in (to engulf) anagram of MANY SCANDALS
18 TROPIC
St Helier perhaps turned hot and humid (6)
CI PORT (St Helier perhans) backwards (turned). “CI” is an abbreviation of Channel Islands.
20 GUTTERED
Spoke after end of ding-dong and threatened to go out (8)
[ding-don]G + UTTERED (spoke)
22 FOMENTER
Person fostering teen from Barking (8)
Anagram (barking) of TEEN FROM
24 PALLID
Insipid sunshine left one disappointed at first (6)
PAL (sunshine) + L (left) + I (one) + D[isappointed]
25 BEAR GARDEN
Disorderly scene in bar angered drunk (4,6)
Anagram (drunk) of BAR ANGERED
26 SPUR
Promises of money dropped from phoney stimulus (4)
SPUR[ious] (promises of money dropped from phoney)
DOWN
1 POLE DANCER
Erotic acrobat cavorting heartily after penal code amended (4,6)
Anagram (amended) of PENAL CODE + [cavo]R[ting]
2 RECENTLY
Not much money in bank of late (8)
CENT (not much money) in (in) RELY (bank)
3 SCRAPE
Fix fight with European (6)
SCRAP (fight) + E (European)
4 CAROUSAL
Excited state after cocaine and revelry (8)
C (cocaine) + AROUSAL (excited state)
5 LENTIL
Pulse is fast, almost unhealthy (6)
LENT (fast) + IL[l] (almost unhealthy)
6 WARM
Passionate women’s weapon (4)
W (woman) + ARM (weapon)
9 LIGHT-FINGERED
Spooner’s spirit remained likely to lift (5-8)
Spoonerism of “fight lingered” (spirit remained)
14 MYSTERIOUS
Writer’s grave keeping heart’s ultimate secret (10)
MY (writer’s) + [hear]T in (keeping) SERIOUS (grave)
16 ALCATRAZ
Old Nick beginning to tempt cracking tennis champ (8)
T[empy] in (cracking) [Carlos] ALCARAZ (tennis champ) with a very sneaky cryptic definition
17 NEEDLESS
Unnecessary rivalry with second son (8)
NEEDLES (rivalry) with the ‘S’ repeated (with second son). ‘Needles’ can mean rivalry, especially in a sporting encounter.
19 POETRY
Regularly using prose, attempt verse (6)
P[r]O[s]E + TRY (attempt)
21 TOP-END
Elite backing some unashamed nepotism (3-3)
Reverse (backing) hidden word (some)
23 OBEY
Comply with honour and dignity at last (4)
OBE (honour) + {dignit]Y

9 comments on “Financial Times 18,264 by Rosa Klebb”

  1. Diane

    I’ve been waiting for something like 16d to pop up – trust Rosa Klebb to do it in style. And any clue that equates Trump (12) with unpleasant gusts of hot air gets my vote. 1d was also naughty but nice.
    A great Spoonerism in 9, lovely surfaces aplenty – like 2 and the superb 15 – and clever misdirections like ‘sunshine’ for ‘pal’ (24) all combine to make this another winning puzzle from Ms Klebb.
    Thanks to her and Pete, whose happy task it was to blog.

  2. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Rosa and Pete

    7ac can be taken as four definitions: gave birth and tolerated separately as past tense verbs, pain as a noun, then well for an Australian.

    17dn: I read this as NEEDLE (rivalry) + S (second) + S (son).

  3. Martyn

    Agree this was difficult in places. For me, it was the large number of remote synonyms that made it tough.

    I did not know BEAR GARDEN, but what a wonderful expression and great clue. TOP END was brilliant. And I also liked COLLATERAL

    I did not know BORE is Aussie only. Interesting. Nor did I know CI. And it was wonderful to learn Trump means fart. Is that a UKism? Finally, thanks for the help parsing GOOD TIME.

    Thanks RK and PM

  4. Fiona

    Lovely to have a puzzle from Rosa Klebb.

    I am always impressed by how she manages to make sure that the surfaces make sense. I know that is not essential but I really appreciate the skill it takes.

    Lots of great clues including: GUTTERED, SPUR, COLLATERAL, LENTIL (LOI), LIGHT-FINGERED, ALCATRAZ

    Thanks Rosa Klebb and Pete Maclean

  5. Rats

    Wow! What a puzzle! Thanks so much Rosa! I thoroughly enjoyed this. 2d Not much money in bank of late (8) has got to be one of the best clues I’ve come across. It is flawless.

  6. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Rosa for another gem full of polished surfaces. I found the bottom half a bit tougher than the top but everything eventually fell into place. My one error was BEAR GARDEN; I casually entered ‘beer garden’ by just looking at the fodder; I’ve certainly been to beer gardens that can be described as ‘disorderly scenes’ to justify my jump to conclusions. In any event my top picks were COLLATERAL, SOLEMN, CAYMAN ISLANDS (brilliant), RECENTLY (just perfect), LENTIL, and MYSTERIOUS (love the poetic surface). Thanks Pete for the blog.

  7. Roz

    Thanks for the blog , will just agree with comments above and add POLE DANCER to the list , what a brilliant way to get the final R .
    GENERA are not classes taxonomically but the clue is logical .

  8. PostMark

    Like PB, I stopped at 4 definitions for BORE. There may be others. The Spanish tennis player has been a boon to compilers and I’d imagine ALCATRAZ has appeared as a solution slightly more often in recent years as a result. The def was very nice. As others have noted, buttery smooth surfaces and economical cluing constructions which is the mix I’ve come to expect from this setter. Other faves inc CAYMAN ISLANDS, GUTTERED, FOMENTER, BEER GARDEN, RECENTLY, LENTIL and LIGHT FINGERED.

    Thanks both

  9. Pelham Barton

    10ac further to Roz@7: Collins 2023 p 816 has genus n, pl genera or genuses 2 logic a class of objects or individuals that can be divided into two or more groups or species 3 a class, group, etc with common characteristics. SOED 2007 p 1094 dates the meaning in logic from the mid 16th century, the biological term from the early 17th century, and the general meaning (“A category, a kind.”) from the mid 17th century.

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