Guardian 24,682/Paul – On the run

A very enjoyable and typically witty puzzle from Paul, based around his participation in the London Marathon this weekend.

Key:
* = anagram
dd = double definition
< = reverse

Across
1. POTASSIUM U in (MISS ATOP)<
6. CASH Anagram of first letters of Sponsor At Crypitica.co.uk How, with a link to Paul’s web site, where you can sponsor him in the Marathon.
8. RUNABOUT R=RUN + C=ABOUT, and a runabout is a car that is not a Rolls Royce
9. NAPERY N + APERY
10. WANGLE W ANGLE – with “engineer” needing to be read as a verb.
12,11. LONDON MARATHON (THRALDOM ON AN’ ON)* &lit
15. SKULLCAP (f)ULL in PACKS<
16. MINSTREL (SILENT R(oo)M )*
19. TITTER T T in TIER. Frankie Howerd springs to mind..
21. SNICKERS NICKER (= thief) in SS
22. ORANGE O RANGE
24. RABBIT dd – slang for talk, as in the Chas & Dave song for example
25. RIFLEMAN FIR< + M in LEAN
26. VEST S in VET
Down
1,27. PAULA RADCLIFFE PAUL + CLIFF (“what’s faced”) in DARE*
2. TWANGED (GET DAWN)*
4. ISTHMUS I’S + M (motorway) in THUS
5. MINOR SUIT “miner” + SUIT (fit) – diamonds and clubs are known as minor suits in Bridge
6. CAPITAL dd – the “Say” being because London is as example of a capital, not a definition.
7. SURROGATE (GROUSE RAT)*
13. ORIENTATE O'(B)RIEN + TATE
14. NORWESTER (ROWS ENTER)*
17. SACKBUT SACK + BUT – an old type of trombone.
18. LUSTRED LUST + RED
20. TEA LEAF TEAL + (d)EAF – rhyming slang for “thief”
22. OFFAL OFFA + L (third letter of Cole)
23,3. GRAVE STONE A very clever clue – anagram of ORANGE VEST (answers to 22ac and 26), and “quick”=”alive”. Just to nitpick, perhaps it should be “my name may be on it”ignore that – I misread the clue

27 comments on “Guardian 24,682/Paul – On the run”

  1. Hello Andrew (and thanks etc),

    My wordy … maybe it was the 2 glasses of wine at lunch … but I had a hard time with this … and I knew that Paul was doing the marathon. But without the help of the internet I wouldn’t have stood a chance.

    8ac …. much too clever for me, so thank you for the explanation.

    20 dn …. I’m no good at Oz rhyming slang, so I’m no chance at Brit stuff. (No drama here about obscurity)

  2. Andrew, thanks for a great blog of a great puzzle – several ‘ahas’ and smiles.

    8ac was an unusual device, as was ‘walls’ as a container indicator in 16ac.

    23,3 was indeed very clever – I’m not sure I understand your reservation. Presumably Paul chose his vest to suit his puzzle!

    I think maybe 20dn was a tad unfair for Monica et al, giving no indication at all that it was rhyming slang – but a lovely surface!

  3. Didn’t like 6a (indirect anagram, albeit an easy one) or 8a (definition too vague) but apart from that, all good solid clues and plenty of typically Paul-esque (or should that be Pauline?) fun, even if it seemed slightly easier than his usual standard, helped by the fact that the theme was all but spelled out in the intro line.

  4. Eileen – looking at the clue again I withdraw my nitpick: I was thinking it was “if I’m not quick my name’s on it”, which isn’t necessarily true, but the way the clue is actually written it’s fine.

  5. Monica – re 8a, as someone commented yesterday, that’s one of those clues that seems very clever when you know the answer… Too clever by half for my liking.

    Eileen – well, we’ve had unindicated Aussie slang before, so it’s all fair game as far as I’m concerned!

    By the way, have we all seen the new-look cryptica? He mentions the orange vest there.

  6. On the online version, there was no “paul’s gonna do some fumd raising” hint. Lucky I went pdf today.

    Wiki helped me alot!!!!

  7. Smutchin: I don’t think 6ac really counts as an indirect anagram, as the letters are in the clue and unambiguously indicated (once you read the clue the right way).

  8. I wonder why Paul hasn’t asked for sponsorship in his FT puzzle today? Did anyone else sponsor him in the Autumn for his trip to Brazil? I don’t think he’s been yet!

  9. Thanks for the post, Andrew. Excellent fun, as usual, and it’s great to have two such strong crosswords in a row in the Guardian.

    I see that Paul’s website has had a bit of a redesign, and now has a form to ask Araucaria a question!

  10. Thanks for the blog. 8ac stumped me, I’m afraid, along with 4dn and 15ac.

    I thought 19ac was very neat.

    Good luck in the marathon, Paul. Sunday looks like it might be wet…

  11. Andrew #10: hmm, maybe, but the clue still feels clunky to me, like it’s been forced to fit the surface. Still, I can’t really complain given the “good cause” excuse for doing it like that.

  12. Good fun – as ever, the online version on the Grauniad site omitted the instructions which helped it make sense. Same fix for solvers as usual – use the PDF version.

  13. Late enough for a short note on 23a quick/vivid? This pairing first sparked my interest in double cognates. Multiple cognates here, in fact.
    The IE root GWI diversifies into:
    Proto-Germanic *kwikvas > Old Saxon quik > E. quick (alive);
    Greek bios > biology etc
    Greek zoe > zoology etc
    Latin vivere..victum, vita, vitalis > Fr Vivre, E. vivid, vital, victuals.
    Multiple cognates in Germanic, Scandinavian, Slavic and Celtic langauges inc. Welsh byw.

  14. Hi; I’m new to your blog, although I’ve been doing the puzzles for awhile.
    While 8ac was the last to be solved, it was my favorite clue in a long time.
    24ac: I know rabbit can mean converse; does it also mean conversation?
    2dn: How is pants an anagram indicator? It’s perhaps further confused by the ‘s.
    Thanks for the blog.

  15. Only just got round to this one, but what a treat! Also, don’t know about during the day but the instructions are definitely online now (between the title and the “click here for pdf”).

    Too many good clues to mention (although I agree that 8ac is only good once you know the answer). I loved the &lit in 6ac, and Paula Radcliffe. 2dn was very Paul too…

  16. A great puzzle i especially liked the subtlety of the SNICKERS clue. As for the Cryptica redesign it is much better but mis spelling the sites name on the home page is a bit imbarisinng.
    Robert pants is slang for rubbish so i think it works as an anagram indicator.
    Stiofain

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