Everyman 4,146/5 April

Another bit of Sunday fun from Everyman

With all our favourite Everyman trademarks present and correct. Except that that isn’t quite true. Having not seen the usual geographic reference in recent puzzles – Everyman is, after all, a very well-travelled chap and perhaps feels he’s been everywhere he needs to go – I’ve started to look out for something different. It started a few weeks ago with the appearance of Rafael Nadal, followed the week after by Andre Agassi. And now we have STEFFI GRAF (who, as it happens, is married to Mr Agassi). I may very well be wrong about this, but I have nevertheless tentatively highlighted that clue in the grid. We shall have to wait to see whether this mini-trend continues in coming weeks. [Edit: having glanced quickly at today’s puzzle, I see no sign of any tennis players. Ah well, perhaps they will return…]

My favourites this time out are the aforementioned tennis star, the neat anagram/CAD for RATIONALISE, MAESTRO for introducing me to a new word, and, top pick for me, the rather brilliant HILLARY. Thanks to Everyman.

Moh’s unarguably inexact cruciverbal hardness scale rating: Gypsum

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 AS PER USUAL
Predictably, sadly, start to unclasp purse, alas! (2,3,5)
Anagram (sadly) of U (start to Unclasp) PURSE ALAS
6 USER
Computer owner regularly getting bum steer (4)
Alternate letters (regularly getting) of bUm StEeR
9 HAMSTRINGS
Bad actors smothering series – but to pull them would be painful (10)
HAMS around (smothering) STRING (series)
10 TEAM
Eleven, maybe, in swarm that’s heard (4)
Soundalike (that’s heard) of ‘teem’ for swarm
11 GOOD CLEAN FUN
Canoodle, most of fungi spreading – hardly this! (4,5,3)
Anagram (spreading) of CANOODLE FUNG[i]
15 HILLARY
Adventurer going to extremes with many heights surrounding? (7)
AR (first and last letters – going to extremes – of AdventureR) inside (with… surrounding) HILLY (many heights), &lit definition of Sir Edmund Hillary, one of the two people who were first to reach the summit of Everest in 1953
16 CHARGER
It’ll bring your phone back to life – or is that bull? (7)
Double definition of a sort, the second being a slightly whimsical play on bull as short for BS as well as an animal that might charge at you
17 TOURISM
The writer visiting French city with Frenchman – doing this? (7)
I (the writer) inside (visiting) TOURS (French city) + M (monsieur, Frenchman)
19 AT HEART
Basically a menace when a little rascal scoots over (2,5)
A THREAT with the R (first letter – a little – of rascal) moving to the right
20 BAD RECEPTION
It has insufficient bars – or no bar at all (3,9)
Double def, the first playing on the signal bars on a mobile phone, the second on, say, a wedding reception that has no bar
23 ERRS
Everyman’s introduction, meeting bishop, first of several blunders (4)
E (Everyman’s introduction) + RR (Right Reverend, honorific conferred on bishops in the Anglican and Catholic churches) + S (first of Several)
24 STURDINESS
Stud rinses off showing lusty quality (10)
Anagram (off) of STUD RINSES
25 DADA
Duchamp’s / Arp’s derisive avant-gardism, primarily? (4)
First letters of the first four words of the clue, Marcel Duchamp and Jean Arp both being prominent figures in the Dadaist movement
26 CONDIMENTS
After split second, mint for mint sauce, etc (10)
Anagram (after split) of SECOND MINT
DOWN
1 ACHE
A revolutionary’s a persistent pain (4)
A + CHE (Guevara)
2 PUMA
Quiz mostly a beast (4)
PUM[p] (quiz mostly) + A
3 RATIONALISE
How to make realisation? (11)
Anagram (to make) of REALISATION with the clue as definition
4 SPIN-DRY
Activate a kind of cycle and long to swap hands (4-3)
SPIND[L]Y (long) with the L (left) replaced by R (right) (to swap hands)
5 ANGELIC
Orange licorice, somewhat divine (7)
Hidden (somewhat) in orANGE LICorice
7 STEFFI GRAF
She regularly attended court having broken giraffe’s foot (6,4)
Anagram (having broken) of GIRAFFES FT for the German former tennis player
8 REMUNERATE
Pay rock band in Paris, one wanting speed (10)
Charade of REM (the band) + UNE (in Paris, one) + RATE
12 ANACHRONISM
Bad timing? (11)
Cryptic definition
13 WHITE BREAD
Chess player getting money – that might be a bloomer (5,5)
WHITE (as opposed to black in chess, so chess player) + BREAD (money)
14 FLOUNDERED
Stumbled when given flatfish that’s one-third cooked (10)
FLOUNDER (flatfish) + [cook]ED (one-third cooked)
18 MAESTRO
Top musician, cellist, smeared roset (7)
MA (Yo-Yo Ma, cellist) + anagram (smeared) of ROSET. Wiki tells me that ‘roset’ is another word for the rosin that string players rub on their bows
19 ALTERED
Modified wonky treadle (7)
Anagram (wonky) of TREADLE
21 VEIN
Blood vessel‘s useless, you said? (4)
Soundalike (you said?) of ‘vain’
22 ASKS
Requests jobs that will take no time (4)
[t]ASKS (tasks without the T)

20 comments on “Everyman 4,146/5 April”

  1. vannucci

    I see The Observer paywall is up again this week for Everyman 4147 after a few Sundays’ respite. I’ve tried to update the slowdownwiseup url but that’s not working, either. Can anyone help wiith a link, please, or do I finally have to call it a day with the Everyman after soooo many years?

  2. ARhymerOinks

    I won’t be tackling the Everyman anymore – I can’t justify the expense of the subscription just for a crossword. I will miss it, though, it was an enjoyable part of my Sunday routine.

  3. Mike

    You can access the puzzle for free through PressReader. You need to log in to that app using credentials supplied by your local lending library. The Everyman crossword is in the New Review. I capture the image of the crossword and then print it out.

  4. Everpuzzled

    Seems to be working again today. I’ve only registered (not subscribed) and both Everyman and Gemelo are available 😀

  5. Etu

    Last one in was BAD RECEPTION, which I thought rather good when I finally got it.

    vannucci, 1:

    I think that we’re only allowed so many free visits. I delete the O’s cookies from time to time, (which I guess record visits) and was able to print off today’s without charge. Hope this might assist.

    Cheers all.

  6. vannucci

    ARhymerOinks #2 – my sentiments entirely. A sad loss after 50 years, but all good things must come to an end……:(

  7. Jay

    For those struggling to access this week’s puzzle… https://tinyurl.com/Everyman4147

  8. Cara

    Found this super hard this week -couldn’t get in at all…only managed about 3/4s. Felt more ‘cryptic’ and less straightforward than recent weeks. Frustrating 😵‍💫. Thanks for all!

  9. Roz

    Thanks for the blog , I hope people continue to persevere , Jay@7 and others often put links . I am just hoping the Observer continues to publish a newspaper .
    I agree with Cara@8 , this seemed a bit tricky after a good run , hope it is a one-off .
    If anybody does need a new crossword home , I am told the FT provides free on-line puzzles . I do them in the paper and several each week are very friendly .

  10. Cara

    @Roz – thanks a lot! You are always so supportive and make me feel slightly less useless and slightly more determined not to give up 🙂

  11. Peter

    I assmed that there wasn’t a rhyming couplet in this Everyman. Bit surprised to see you’ve highlighted 11A and 20A but I suppose they work at a stretch.
    Certainly not fun though. This was more like hard work. Not much joy in this puzzle.

  12. GrahamInSydney

    I’m with Cara @8, I found this way harder than the average Everyman, it needed two revisits before succumbing. Is it a known phenomenon that the puzzle is harder for holiday weekends (I’m a relatively new Everyman aficionado), or was I just having a bad head 3 days?
    Thanks to Everyman and Moh.

  13. Jay

    Peter@11, the pairing this week is GOOD and BAD. Everyman occasionally uses ‘antonym’ word beginnings or endings in place of a rhyming pair. In the past we’ve had Black/White, Hot/Cold, Grand/Little, Ball/Chain, Rock/Roll, Bread/Potatoes, Back/Front etc.
    Always in symmetrical grid positions.

  14. poc

    I have yet to have any difficulty accessing the Everyman weekly puzzle. I am registered but not paying a subscription.

    Tangentially, the printable version has changed in the past few weeks and is now notably harder to read because of a change of font (the clue numbers in the grid being almost illegible). It also ignores printer settings which I configured to save toner.

  15. Mincarlo

    I really struggled with 8 down. I thought it was renumerate but had the ‘M’ from TEAM. REMUNERATE a new word to me after 60 years! Good to keep learning I guess. Thanks Everyman and Miserableoldhack for the blog.

  16. Big Maz

    ‘Primarily’ clues are always quick and easy and provide a bit of welcome relief! But I’m not sure DADA at 25A is entirely satisfactory when the meaning of the words leads to Dadaism rather than the one name.

  17. BobM

    With a bit of perseverance deleting Observer cookies and others that I didn’t recognise, I managed to get today’s to load on about the 5th attempt. No doubt they read these comments so no doubt it won’t work next week. 🙁

  18. Fiona

    Roz @ 9 and others

    re the FT puzzles.

    If you click on the Financial Times link on this page top left, you go to the FT and can either pull up a PDF version to print out or go to an interactive online version (I do the latter).

    Yesterday’s setter was Rosa Klebb – always has great puzzles.

  19. Roz

    Cara@10 I know quite a few people at work who do the Everyman and this week it was just complaints . We should get another good run soon .
    Mincarlo@15 I do know it is REMUNERATE but whenever I use this word my first thought is always renumerate .
    Thanks Fiona@18 , I hope people will use your tip , the puzzle yesterday is highly recommended . I have recently upgraded from quills to ballpoint pens so enough progress for now .

  20. Johnno

    I found this one really difficult – brain not on form – but onwards and upwards. I still buy the Observer as a real paper so feel I’m supporting a decent platform for good journalism – and getting the Everyman thrown in, too. I guess I’m old fashioned and rich enough to afford the £4.50/week my subscription costs

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