Times 2 - UK (2020-11-09)

(Antfer) #1

the times | Monday November 9 2020 1GT 15


MindGames


© PUZZLER MEDIA

Divide the grid
into square or
rectangular
blocks, each
containing one
digit only. Every
block must
contain the
number of cells
indicated by the
digit inside it.

Enter each of
the numbers
from 1 to 9 in
the grid, so that
the six sums
work. We’ve
placed two
numbers to get
you started.
Each sum
should be
calculated left
to right or top
to bottom.

From these letters, make words of
three or more letters, always including
the central letter. Answers must be in
the Concise Oxford Dictionary, excluding
capitalised words, plurals, conjugated
verbs (past tense etc), adverbs ending
in LY, comparatives and superlatives.
How you rate 13 words, average;
18, good; 21, very good; 24, excellent

  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
   

1 Falklands conflict 2 Nose 3 Mecca 4 Henry VIII
5 Bambi 6 Peanut (Arachis hypogaea). It is actually a
legume 7 Po 8 Hilaire Belloc 9 That ’70s Show — set in
the fictional Point Place, Wisconsin 10 Shiva 11 Hublot
12 Nicolas Mathieu 13 Chess 14 Norway. It has been held
at Frognerbadet pool, Oslo since 2008 15 Bar Refaeli

Seston (a) Particulate
matter suspended in
water, such as plankton
Volplane (b) To glide
towards the ground with
no engine power
Regmaker (b) A hangover
cure taken as a drink (SA)

Kakuro 2779

Sudoku 11,

Killer 7433

Futoshiki 3820

Suko 3016

Train Tracks 1168

Word watch

Quiz

Easy 3; Medium 330; Harder 357
Cell Blocks 3997 Set Square 2782

Saturday’s answers
adapt, adit, arid, aspidistra, dais, dart,
data, diapir, diarist, dirt, diss, drat, drip,
pard, raid, rapid, riad, sadist, said, sapid,
sard, staid, trad, triad

times2 CrosswordNo 8431 Brain Trainer


AN


S


WE


R


MEDIUM 9 –^354 +^96


(^33) / 44
OF IT
HHALF OF +
IT
SQUARE x 4
IT
(^222) / 33 x 6
OF IT
÷ 5
A
N
S
EASY 4 DOUBLE WER
IT



  • 6 – 4 CUBE
    IT
    (^11) / (^33) + 5 ÷ 6
    OF IT
    TREBLE
    IT



  • 8


AN


S
HARDER 91 7 ÷^3 WER

(^666) / 7
OF IT
DOUD BLE
IT



  • 466 – 243 TREBLE
    IT
    (^222) / 33
    OF IT
    +^777 / 88
    OF IT



  • 1 083


Across
1 Ancienttwo-handledjar( 7 )
5 Temporarilystop( 5 )
8 Eg,gelignite( 4 , 9 )
9 Deliiiverytruck( 4 )
10 Sailingffforpleasureor
racing( 8 )
113 Haaawaiiangarland( 3 )
14 Ellipses( 5 )
15 Finish( 3 )

16 Holliness(( 8 ))
17 Enclosedspace;measure( 4 )
20 Parkingofffffficial( 777 , 6 )
22 Inbaseeight( 5 )
23 Makebigger( 7 )

Down
1 Gardenpest( 5 )
2 PlaaaybyShaaaw( 9 )
3 Dowhatoneistold( 4 )
4 Heliumnucleus( 5 , 8 )
5 Predict( 8 )
6 Uniiiversity( 3 )
7 Cameintoexistence( 7 )
11 Natiiveofff,eg,Reykkjaaavik( 9 )
12 Seeminglyyoung( 8 )
1113 EnclaaavedAfffrican
kingdom( 7 )
18 Crowdedclosely
together( 5 )
19 Two-mastedboat( 4 )
21 Partofplaayoropera( 3 )

SolutiontoCrossword 8430


1 2 3 4 5 6 7

8

9 10 11

12

13 14 15

16 17 18

19

20 21

22 23

CULDESAC DID
D I T A U E
DISCONNECTED
E P P A P
URDU WHISTLER
T A L S
ASSENT LEANTO
H C O R
HEDGEHOG SOFA
L L I E L
FLUORESCENCE
A O R A I E
CAM ALLOCATE

Cell Blocks No 3998


© PUZZLER MEDIA

Polygon Set Square No 2783


Please note, BODMAS does not apply

Killer Gentle No 7434 Solutions


Killer Tricky No 7435


As with standard Sudoku, fill the grid so that every column,
every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. Each set
of cells joined by dotted lines must add up to the target number
in its top-left corner. Within each set of cells joined by dotted
lines, a digit cannot be repeated.

Need help with today’s puzzle? Call 0905 757 0143 to check the
answers. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s
network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri 9am-5.30pm).


Cluelines Stuck on Sudoku, Killer or KenKen? Call 0901 293
6263 before midnight to receive four clues for any of today’s
puzzles. Calls cost £1 plus your telephone company’s network
access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri 9am-5.30pm).

Winners of the world-class online
Minor Alt Invitational II were the
predominantly-English team cap-
tained by Jonathan Harris. They
nearly didn’t show up for the quar-
ter-final as they didn’t think they’d
made it through the round-robin
stage (they scraped through their
group of eight in 4th place with a
below-average victory point score).
The hero of today’s deal from the
semi-final was Andrew McIntosh
(“Tosh”) of Sussex — from the
other English team to reach the last
four, captained by Andrew Black.
Tosh would have done slightly bet-
ter by passing partner Tom Paske’s
take-out double of 3 ♦, converting it
into penalties. But a fine piece of
declarer-play held the loss to a
mere 7 0 points.
At the other table, Muller - de
Wijs had made light work earning
500 points defending 3 ♦ doubled
(after 1NT- 3 ♦-Dbl-all pass). North
had led the king of spades, declarer
(West) winning the ace and leading
a diamond to the king. South had
won the ace and switched to the ace
of hearts (North encouraging with
the ten), a heart to the king, and a
third heart ruffed. South had cashed
the ace of clubs and led a second
spade to North’s queen — six defen-
sive tricks in about six seconds.
West led a diamond v Tosh’s thin
3NT, declarer beating East’s king
with the ace. East was now the
danger hand, as he would be lead-
ing a second diamond through
declarer’s jack-low.
At trick two, declarer led a
spade, pleased to observe dummy’s
queen win. He now led a club (cru-

y


cially from dummy) and, when


East played the ten, he ducked
(key play), knowing West would

y


have to overtake (unless void).


yy


West’s bare queen won the trick
and he cashed the queen of dia-
monds and led a third diamond.
Winning the jack of diamonds,
declarer cashed the ace of clubs,
felling East’s king, and ran his long
clubs. On the last club, West had to
discard his final winning diamond
to retain♥QJ3 and♠A. After dis-
carding a heart from dummy,
declarer could now afford to lead
up to the king of spades and secure
a cheeky overtrick — +430.
[email protected]

Contract: 3NT, Opening Lead: ♦ 5


Dealer: North, Vulnerability: East-West

N
W E
S

Pass Pass
1 ♣( 1 ) 3 ♦(2) Dbl(3) pass
3NT( 4 ) End
(1) Playing Strong Notrump. Lest you think
most top pairs play Strong, Muller-de Wijs
at the other table opened a 9-14 1NT (!) —
logical facing a passed partner as game val-
ues are not present.
(2) Pre-emptive but dubious given the bro-
ken suit and unfavourable vulnerability.
(3) Negative (ie take-out).
( 4 ) Tempting to pass given his three-and-a-
half defensive tricks but the odd -670 is
hard to swallow. A clear pass at Pairs.

S(McIntosh) W N(Paske) E

♠J 984
♥ 98762
♦K 9
♣K1 0

Teams ♠KQ 52
♥K 105
♦ 7
♣J 9652

♠ 1073
♥A
♦AJ 6
♣A8 743

♠A 6
♥QJ
♦Q 1085432
♣Q

Bridge Andrew Robson


CB
LAUNCH
OR I
SO I L K
EA E
DUL L

F
LIST
NE
LADDER
AEU
GSWUM

1 Crawl
2 Paddle
3 Breast
4 Stroke
5 Butterfly

1 Qxg7+! Bxg7 2 Rxg7+ creates the
so-called “windmill”. After 2 ...
Kh8 3 Rxf7+ Kg8 4 Rg7+ Kh
5 Rxa7+ (unnecessary as 5 Rg6+
at once is easier) 5 ... Kg8 (better
is 5 ... Rf6 but 6 Rxa8 still wins for
White) 6 Rg7+ Kh8 7 Rg6+ Rf
8 Bxf6+ Qxf6 9 Rxf6 and White
emerges a rook up

B W N E S T
FREEHAND CURT
O A P D E U
SCARCE OUNCE
C RYE A
COWBOY STRIPE
L R I R
SIRIUS BOOBOO
N LEO F
VAGUE REASON
I O U I L U
BEAU TENTOONE
W T H G T D

Lexica 5560

Lexica 5559

Chess — Winning Move

Quintagram

Brain Trainer

Quick Cryptic 1739

KenKen 5106

Codeword 4114

Square Routes
87

Tredoku 1655

M P D R O
U R T E F
C A G A M
L N O B H
I N T U S
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