Independent 12,355 by Raider

The last Raider we blogged was in February last year. At the time, we commented that it was 10 months since his previous puzzle and that we hoped that we wouldn’t have to wait another 10 months before the next one. In fact we had to wait 7 months for his next one in Sept 25 and it’s now 8 months further on.

Was it worth the wait?

YES! There were a couple of unusual anagram indicators – casual and checkered – and some crafty misdirections – Jimmy White and Ford Sierra for example.

We have commented before on Raider’s  smooth surfaces and the same was true here. We missed the pangram last time so checked today but we cannot find J, V, X or Z.

Thanks Raider.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1/5. Whose uncool trousers split to reveal what’s underneath? (4,4,4,7)
SHOW ONES TRUE COLOURS

An anagram (‘split’) of WHOSE UNCOOL TROUSERS

4. Stripper dances round Ohio, ending in tiny fortune (10)
PROSPERITY

An anagram (‘dances’) of STRIPPER round O (Ohio) + Y (last letter or ‘ending’ in tiny)

9. One essential piece to Jimmy White’s stick (6)
IMPALE

I (one) M (middle letter or ‘essential piece’ of Jimmy) PALE (white)

10. What bodyguard listens to shooter after attention? (8)
EARPIECE

PIECE (shooter) after EAR (attention)

11. Mimed clue for cadet (5,3)
ACTED OUT

An anagram (‘OUT’) of ACTED would be ‘cadet’ – hence a clue for the word

13. Yellow bird by coalmine’s entrance (6)
CRAVEN

RAVEN (bird) by C (first letter or ‘entrance’ to coalmine)

14. Difficulties grasping one thousand plus eight, maybe a mental block? (6,4)
RUBIKS CUBE

RUBS (difficulties) around (‘grasping’) I (one) K (thousand) plus CUBE (‘eight maybe’ – 2 x 2 x 2 – a cube number)

16. Hint: 10A masks tense! (4)
IOTA

IO A around (‘masking’) T (tense)

17. Consumed over 50? And the rest! (2,2)
ET AL

A reversal (‘over’) of ATE (consumed) + L (50 in Roman numerals)

18. Boozer knocked back wine before neighbourhood meeting (5,5)
LOCAL DERBY

LOCAL (boozer) + a reversal (‘knocked back’) of RED (wine) + BY (before)

20. What stops penetration attempts from Romeo during fling? (6)
ARMOUR

R (Romeo) inside (‘during’) AMOUR (fling)

21. Bound to play this casual golfer taking old man round (8)
LEAPFROG

An anagram (‘casual’) of GOLFER around (‘taking’) a reversal (’round’) of PA (old man)

23. Fellow American wearing a blue checkered blazer? (8)
FLAMBEAU

F (fellow) + AM (American) inside (‘wearing’) an anagram (‘checkered’) of A BLUE

24. Question latest piercing way to look like Clint Eastwood? (6)
SQUINT

QU (Question) IN (‘latest’ as in fashion) inside (‘piercing’) ST (‘way’ – street) – does Clint Eastwood squint?

26. The pony is unfortunately dead, put to sleep (10)
HYPNOTISED

An anagram (‘unfortunately’) of THE PONY IS + D (dead)

27. Heavyweight boxes with Barry? (4)
TOWN

TON (heavyweight) around (‘boxing’) W (with)

DOWN
2. Horrible smell and noise coming from workers? (3)
HUM

Double definition – the workers being bees

3. Temporary digs for Jonah Hill are oddly messy after a week (5)
WHALE

An anagram (‘messy’) of odd letters in HiLl ArE after W (week)

4. Ex-pro’s struggling to clinch league for Hammers (7)
PLEXORS

An anagram (‘struggling’) of EX-PRO’S around or ‘clinching’ L (league)

5. See 1 Across
6. Parking extremely neglected Ford Sierra near iconic red sports car (7)
PORSCHE

P (parking) fORd (missing first and last letters – ‘extremely neglected’) S (Sierra in the phonetic alphabet) CHE (‘iconic red’ – Che Guevara)

7. Bad migraine stopped by pill? Think again (9)
REIMAGINE

An anagram (‘bad’) of MIGRAINE around or ‘stopped by’ E (pill)

8. Turned out they expressed disapproval following penalty notice and fine (11)
TICKETTYBOO

TheY (first and last letters only or ‘turned out’) BOO (expressed disapproval) after  TICKET (penalty notice). We thought first of all that it needed to be ‘booed’ for ‘expressed disapproval’ but when writing up the blog, we realised that it could be a noun.

12. Attack while losing piece in board game Othello? (11)
COUNTERPLAY

COUNTER (piece in board game) PLAY (Othello?)

15. Where you’ll find Douglas bonking Alf and Simone? (4,2,3)
ISLE OF MAN

An anagram (‘bonking’) of ALF and SIMONE

18. Most prodigious series of stunts e.g. rally-driving in reverse (7)
LARGEST

Hidden (‘series of’) and ‘reversed’ in stunTS EG RALly-driving

19. Hooked up with ladies going wild over crossword setter (7)
LIAISED

An anagram (‘wild’) of LADIES around I (crossword setter)

22. Iodine found in grass turning orange? (5)
FRUIT

I (iodine) inside a reversal (‘turning’) of TURF (grass)

25. Green amphibian with tail cut off (3)
NEW

NEWt (amphibian) missing last letter or ‘with tail cut off’

5 comments on “Independent 12,355 by Raider”

  1. PostMark

    As our bloggers observe, Raider crosswords are few and far between. Which is a shame because they are always beautifully crafted. I, too, enjoyed the splitting up of eg Jimmy White and Jonah Hill as well as some amusing left-field definitions. One of those puzzles where there are just too many good clues; pruning my list quite brutally, I end up with SHOW ONE’S TRUE COLOURS, RUBIK’S CUBE, IOTA, LOCAL DERBY, ARMOUR, HYPNOTISED, WHALE, PORSCHE, LARGEST and FRUIT. Which is still ten!

    Thanks both

  2. E.N.Boll&

    An accomplished and crafty puzzle, but my enthusiasm is somewhat tempered by overuse of anagrams. ( 9, I think ).
    Yes, the surfaces are impressive, until the setter relies on stretchy anagram indicators to get the effect. Trousers “split”? bonking, casual, checkered? Ignore those, and it’s a super job.
    As PM@1 rightly observes, I too had a very long list of cracking clues.
    Thanks, Raider and BJ

  3. Petert

    An excellent puzzle. I could never manage the actual RUBIK’S CUBE and I nearly failed with the clue as well – a cleverly concealed definition.

  4. Undrell

    Excellent! Suited my simplistic ways… I love an anagram! The misdirections were also good in Othello, the “fine”, and Barry! There were a preponderance of longer clues, which was helpful in opening up the puzzle with each solve..
    Thanks Raider and Bertandjoyce

  5. bill_poster

    Lots of fun – thanks Raider. Among many fine clues my favourite was probably CRAVEN, in large part because the only crosser I had was the C. 19d rang true – as a keen cruciverbalist myself I’m usually surrounded by a crowd of admirers.

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