the times | Thursday April 28 2022 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
four 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 11 words, average;
15, good; 22, very good; 29, excellent
79 689 67
2654897 89
48 157 31
96 156897
79 8975
1798 97
398615 69
12 689 89
76 2897564
98 197 97
P N O T
R U E H
I U A
S O R R O W
R O
A N T
S
TAX
OC
BARBER
EE A
YDUNG
After 1 ... Qxf4+! the main point
is that 2 Qxf4 Bb2+ 3 Kb1 Rxd1
is mate. White tried 2 Kb1 but
2 ... Rxd1+ 3 Qxd1 Bd2! 4 c3
Qxe4+ 5 Qc2 Qe1+ won
Cyathus (a) A cup used to
scoop wine from a bowl
(Collins)
Isagogic (a) Introductory
(Chambers)
Sprechgesang (a) A
vocalisation between speech
and song (OED)
Kakuro 3162
Futoshiki 4203 Lexica 6326
Cell Blocks 4456 Set Square 3165 Lexica 6325
Suko 3475
Train Tracks 1617
Chess — Winning Move Word watch
1 Adam
2 Inhabit
3 Consult
4 Account
5 Antonym
Quintagram
1 Earth 2 Ikea 3 Railway 4 Notting Hill 5 Brighton
6 Homeland 7 Ivor Novello 8 Suzi Quatro 9 Málaga
10 Operation Mincemeat — the body was that of a
homeless man named Glyndwr Michael 11 Chisel
12 Antonin Artaud 13 Uziel Gal — original name
Gotthard Glass 14 Alec Bedser. His record was broken
in Adelaide by Brian Statham 15 Bay leaf or laurel leaf
Quiz
Easy 122; Medium 676; Harder 5,818
Brain Trainer
Yesterday’s answers
arak, arty, away, awry, carat, cart, craw,
kara, karat, kart, kata, kyat, rack, racy,
rata, tack, tacky, taka, tawa, track,
trackway, tray, wack, wacky, wart, warty,
wary, wrack, yaar, yack, yarak, yatra
times2 CrosswordNo 8890 Brain Trainer
Just follow the instructions from left to right, starting with the number given to reach an answer at the end.
ANSWER
EASY 18
ANSWER
MEDIUM 45
ANSWER
HARDER 248
- 7
+ 74
x 9 75% x 2
OF IT
x 3 + 66
+ 975
- 87
25% x 3
OF IT
x 2
x 3 /^4
OF IT
3
40%
OF IT
+ 12
- 78
25%
OF IT
x 2
+ 14 – 8 x 2
x 3 /^2
OF IT
+^1 / 3
OF IT
+^1
/ 12
OF IT
11
+ 887
Across
1 Dense; agreement (7)
5 Thin circular object
(C, not K) (4)
8 Instrumentalist (6)
9 Understood by few (6)
10 Huge (8)
12 Sod; territory (4)
13 Triple (9)
17 Passport endorsement (4)
18 One authorised to sell
alcohol (8)
20 Time of great danger (6)
21 Fastening device (6)
23 Prison room (4)
24 Artillery subunit (7)
Down
2 Rectangle (6)
3 Remunerate (3)
4 Carried goods (5)
5 Athletic event (9)
6 Soldier on guard (6)
7 Central mountain group (6)
11 Actors' run-through (9)
14 Join up (6)
15 Ferocious (6)
16 Roundabout route (6)
19 Venomous snake (5)
22 Small measure of spirits (3)
Solution to Crossword 8889
T2 CROSSWORD No 8890
1 2 3 4 5 6
7
8 9
10 11 12
13 14
15 16
17 18 19
20 21 22
23 24
D L E C K P
ROOTS SLAV ISH
U W S T S L O
MAGNETO SCORN
U R X R O E
PEAK TEACADDY
D A H K U
OVERSHOE CRAB
U H U X A A
TIARA SWELTER
C I M E N I G
REDRESS OZONE
Y E D N N E
Cell BlocksNo 4457
© PUZZLER MEDIA
Polygon Set SquareNo 3166
Please note, BODMAS does not apply
KillerGentle No 8276 Solutions
KillerTough No 8277
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).
Michael Byrne of Manchester
made two brilliant 3NT contracts
in the quarter-final of the 45th
World Team Championships for
the Bermuda Bowl against the pow-
erful Switzerland. Here is the first.
At the other table, East had not
managed to mention diamonds
(having opened a light 1♥). West
led the queen of spades and
declarer made a comfortable over-
trick. Byrne received the two of
diamonds lead (the Swiss East-
West pair leading low from any
three cards in partner’s suit to
show the count). East inserted the
nine and declarer won the king.
It had to be right to force out the
ace of hearts to establish three extra
tricks and, at trick two, declarer led
the queen of hearts. East won the
ace and continued with the jack of
diamonds to declarer’s queen.
Declarer is up to eight tricks —
three hearts, two diamonds, ace-
king of spades and the ace of clubs.
The unthinking play after cashing
the hearts is to run the queen of
clubs, hoping to make 12 tricks if
East has the king (but going down
if West has it — he has a third dia-
mond to lead to his partner).
However, East cannot have the
king of clubs for one simple rea-
son. East, a passed hand, has
turned up with the ace-jack-ten of
diamonds and the ace of hearts: no
room for the king of clubs (or he’d
have opened). Declarer cashed the
jack of hearts and, after observing
West discard, found the key play of
exiting with a third diamond.
East had to cash his diamond
winners — or declarer could suc-
ceed by playing on clubs. After
those three winners (declarer and
dummy throwing clubs), East
switched to a spade.
Declarer won the king of spades
and crossed to the king-ten of
hearts. On that last heart, West
had to find a discard from the
queen-jack of spades and the king-
five of clubs. If he discards a spade,
dummy’s ace-ten are promoted; if
he lets go a club, declarer can lead
dummy’s to his ace of clubs (felling
the king) and enjoy the jack. A
wonderful suicide squeeze (a
defender squeezing his partner).
[email protected]
Contract: 3NT, Opening Lead: ♦ 2
Dealer: East, Vulnerability: East-West
N
W E
S
Pass
1NT(1) Pass(2) 2♣(3) 2♦(4)
Pass Pass 2NT(5) Pass
3NT(6) End
(1) Showing 15-17.
(2) Would bid at a different vulnerability.
(3) Stayman, asking for four-card majors.
(4) For the lead — I like it.
(5) Balanced game invitation by Kieran
Dyke. Note, if he judged his hand to be
game-forcing, he would bid 3♦ (East’s suit)
to show concern about East’s diamonds.
(6) Clear to accept given the two diamond stop-
pers (♦KQx now almost as good as ♦AKx).
S(Byrne) W N(Dyke) E
♠ 53
♥A9763
♦AJ1094
♣ 3
Teams ♠A102
♥K1084
♦ 83
♣Q1096
♠K6
♥QJ2
♦KQ7
♣AJ874
♠QJ9874
♥ 5
♦ 652
♣K52
Advanced
Bridge Andrew Robson
E M P H A S I S T A P E
A I A U E A
S T E P L Y R I C I S T
C O P H T
S H R A P N E L N A I L
L U I M
S P R E A D S E Q U E L
R X R U
N O V A A C A D E M I C
T N S L S
V E N D E T T A P U S H
G E I R R U
B E A R C O M P O S E R
Sudoku 13,167
Killer 8274
Sudoku 13,168
Killer 8275
Sudoku 13,169
Quick Cryptic 2122
KenKen 5565
Codeword 4573