Constellation whose name is Latin for "lizard" / THU 9-18-25 / Something you might change on a bed / Equine hybrid / Victorious military underdog in the Bible / Quality to which a unique six-character code is assigned, in graphic design / One might say "Big savings all week!" / Customizable, all-in-one internet digest / Holdings of winnings / Muscle car whose name evoked a U.S. road trip / Sister of Helios in Greek myth / Game played on an 8x8 board

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Constructor: Adam Wagner

Relative difficulty: Challenging


THEME: this "in" that — italicized clues all end with qualifiers ("in a sense," "in a way," etc.) where the "in" must be taken literally—that is, there are two clues (one before the "in" and one after) and the answer to the first clue is located inside the answer to the second clue, which then forms an unclued word or phrase:

Theme answers:
  • TOO MUCH (17A: Meditation chant, in a sense) (the meditation chant "OM" appears "in" a sense, namely,  the sense of TOUCH)
  • ROULETTE (25A: Tennis do-over, in a way) (the tennis do-over "LET" appears "in" a way, (like a path, or road), i.e. a ROUTE)
  • RARE EVENT (34A: Superman portrayer Christopher, in so many words) (Christopher REEVE appears "in" so many words, i.e. a lot of possibly shouted words, i.e. a RANT)
  • ACCIDENT (49A: Passport or driver's license, in a manner of speaking) (your ID appears "in" a manner of speaking, i.e. an ACCENT)
  • PELICAN (58A: Action star Jet, in a nutshell) (Action star Jet LI has a nut—PECAN—for a shell)
Word of the Day: HINNY (28A: Equine hybrid) —
 

hinny is a domestic equine hybrid, the offspring of a male horse (a stallion) and a female donkey (a jenny). It is the reciprocal cross to the more common mule, which is the product of a male donkey (a jack) and a female horse (a mare). The hinny is distinct from the mule both in physiology and temperament as a consequence of genomic imprinting and is also less common.

Many supposed examples of the jumart, a supposed hybrid between a horse and a cow in European folklore, were found to be hinnies. (wikipedia)

• • •


Wow, that was unexpected. Haven't struggled with a theme like that in what feels like months. I almost forgot what it was like. I've complained a lot about the way the difficulty level has slowly been decreased over time, to the point where nearly every puzzle plays "easy" compared to how it would've played even a decade ago. "Why do you rate every puzzle 'Easy' or 'Easy-Medium'!?!?" Because I refuse to adjust to the new standards. In fact, this puzzle might not even be "Challenging" by the old standards. Maybe it's just as hard as a regular Thursday should be. But certainly by comparison to puzzles I've been doing of late, this one punched me in the teeth. Repeatedly. The first issue was the shape of the grid—those corners, with 7s running into 7s, are So Hard to get a grip on (compared to the corners of most themed puzzles). And when you come out of the corners, you hardly have anything to work with. Normally, you finish a corner and you've got momentum that can take you into the next section, but here, you've got this:


DIAPER (20A: Something you might change on a bed) and SLURS (24D: Curved lines on sheet music) give me virtually nothing to grab hold of. They're just these tiny little arms reaching out into the void. The SE corner (when I finally got there) actually fell very easily, but every other corner was a struggle. The cluing was difficult in general and it was hard for me to parse multiple answers today, multi-word stuff like "I VOTE NO" and CRANE GAME (?) and PRIZE POTS (!?!?!) and especially STORE AD, dear lord, that one almost broke me (2D: One might say "Big savings all week!"). I'm looking at -READ at the end and thinking "what word could that possibly be?" Words, plural, it turns out. So there was a general difficulty to the puzzle: tough clues, hard-to-parse answers, slippery grid. And then there was the theme.


I did not understand the theme at all until I was like 60% in. I had four themers in place and no idea why they worked. I could see what seemed like relevant words inside those answers ( the "LET" in ROULETTE, for instance, or the "OM" in TOO MUCH, etc.), but I did not stop to figure out how it all worked. Worse, I kept reading the first themer, TOO MUCH, as "To OM much," which I figured was what you did while meditating (i.e. "om" a lot), and so I thought there was some kind of weird mashing up of words, not one word literally inside another word. It was only when wrestling with RARE EVENT that I finally saw what was going on. That answer starts with "R" and I tried to put REEVE there, at the front of the answer, but obviously that wouldn't work. But then REEVE was there, of course, inside the answer ... but inside what? What were those letters on the outside of REEVE doing? "RA ... NT ... where is the 'RANT' coming from? [looks back at clue, stares at 'in so many words'] ... oh my god, 'so many words,' 'RANT,' REEVE inside RANT, gah!" Kind of an 'aha' moment, kind of an exasperated 'finally, you idiot!' moment.  Knowing the theme definitely helped me with the last themer (ACCIDENT), which I was grateful for, because LACERTA, what the actual @*&$#? That corner would've been brutal if I'd had to wrestle with ACCIDENT too. 


The most harrowing moment of the solve was the HINNY / HUE crossing. That HUE clue was meaningless to me (28D: Quality to which a unique six-character code is assigned, in graphic design). Less than meaningless. Gibberish. I am not a graphic designer, so you could've kept adding words to that clue and they likely would have continued to add nothing to my comprehension. I guessed the "H" in HUE because color (i.e. HUE) seemed like something a graphic designer might care about. As for HINNY, pfffft, yeah, I've seen the word before (28A: Equine hybrid). Probably only in crosswords. See also LIGER, another "hybrid" I've never seen anywhere but the grid. So the "H" wasn't a total guess—I felt pretty confident about it, but since that cross appears right on top of a themer I was struggling with, the whole section was a bit yikes. But I think in the end I actually liked this puzzle. The theme is certainly brilliant, conceptually. The fill wasn't always pleasant, and the cluing was definitely harder than usual, but I was grateful to have a puzzle that really put up a fight, just like the good old days.


Bullet points:
  • 1A: Customizable, all-in-one internet digest (RSS FEED) — another brutal parsing. No idea. I was expecting something more specific. I wrote in E-READER at one point. Just floundering.
  • 4D: Like some nouns: Abbr. (FEM.) — not in English!!! The fact that I couldn't get this instantly really hurt.
  • 5D: Gets away from (ELUDES) — sigh, look, 5-Down, now is really not the time or place for the whole EVADES / AVOIDS / ELUDES conundrum! Like, I'm already dealing with significant new problems, I don't need this old one.
  • 8A: Shoots for the stars (GOES BIG) — so not ASPIRES then, great, great ... 
  • 21D: Holdings of winnings (PRIZE POTS) — this phrase is magnificently ugly. I can't imagine seeing it or saying it. I understand what it means now that it's in front of me, but getting it in front of me was work.
  • 22A: ___ Ulrich, Metallica drummer (LARS) — one of the puzzle's few outright gimmes, though as I was filling it in, I sincerely thought "yeesh, that's a gimme for me, but that is Not going to be a gimme for a lot of others." If you are among those others, just know that I was thinking of you.
  • 38D: Constellation whose name is Latin for "lizard" (LACERTA) — this is the kind of arcane *&$% that the puzzle used to throw at you on a regular basis, particularly late in the week. I slightly resent it ... but then I also kinda miss it. I miss getting walloped by stuff like OCHLOCRACY and ZYZZYVA etc. Nostalgic vibes.
  • 8D: Victorious military underdog in the Bible (GIDEON) — oof. My biblical ignorance, exposed. I have heard of GIDEONs Bibles, but I did not know there was a GIDEON actually in the Bible. He was leader of the Israelites and led a victory over the much larger Midonite army (Judges 6-8).
  • 15A: Game played on an 8x8 board (OTHELLO) — I suspected this, but then I also got the game confused with the Verdi opera, which is to say I thought it was spelled OTELLO, so I balked at writing it in here.
  • 3D: Rosh Hashana horns (SHOFARS) — another blessed gimme. And a timely one (Rosh Hashana is next week).
  • 56A: Muscle car whose name evoked a U.S. road trip (TRANS AM) — the car name is so familiar to me that I never stopped to think about what it might "mean" (or "evoke"). Seems so obvious, but the car itself really doesn't seem like something you'd take on a road trip. Seems more like something you'd show off in the parking lot of a burger joint.
[I'm aware that Melba Toast is not a TRANS AM ... I just like this scene]

Hope you had an easier time than I did. Unless you enjoy hard times, in which case, I hope you enjoyed the struggle. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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47 comments:

Rick Sacra 6:05 AM  

Very similar experience to OFL--finally got the theme while staring at ACCiDENT and saw it at last. Enjoyed figuring out San Diego State University one letter at a time, loved PELICAN as clued (in a nutshell)--that was the best of the theme clues! Also TRANSAM as clued, garden GNOMES crossing CASTLES, HONG Kong next to NEPAL. 16:35 for me, which I think is medium-challenging. Great puzzle, thanks ADAM!

Bob Mills 6:06 AM  

Solved it without fully grasping the theme until I had finished, needing only an alphabet run for the HINNY/HUE cross (if it's a cross between a horse and a jenny, shouldn't it be a hEnny?). ID inside ACCENT, and REEVE inside "rant" both made sense, but I had no clue about "Li" or "om." Looking forward to Friday.

phc 6:12 AM  

4D: Like some nouns: Abbr. I thought this might be FEM when I had the first cross from RSSFEED, but admittedly held off until I had OTHELLO for the second cross as well. Thing is, (a) there are nouns in other languages besides English (and practically all Indo-European languages are still gendered, as well as slews of non-IE langs). AND (b) modern English still has a handful of gendered nouns (at least still when I was growing up) -- ship, car, etc. I suppose these holdovers are going out on the basis that calling a car "she" is a strange gender-bias kind of thing. But, having gotten used to heavily gendered languages (try Czech, with its 4 genders one you factor in animacy), I'm sometimes sad we lost it in English.

I agree today felt overall pretty challenging and I didn't figure out the theme until even later in the game than the Master. But I actually managed it in less-than-average time for a Thurs. Go figure.

Conrad 6:13 AM  

Medium. Like @Bob Mills, I realized that the theme clues had no apparent relation to the answers, so I got them from crosses. Didn't grok the theme until after I got the happy music.

Overwrites:
jeNNY before HeNNY(?) before HINNY for the equine at 28A
ucla before usSd before SDSU for the Calexico sch. at 30A

WOE:
LACERTA at 38D

Anonymous 6:27 AM  

Is it that the puzzles are playing easier or that you (we?) have simply become more capable at solving? I for one found this one challenging plus , whatever that means but I find some in the archive easy. Go figure.

Anonymous 6:27 AM  

Very tough. Never understood the theme clues, just wrote in the words that emerged. Never heard of Lacerta.

Anonymous 6:44 AM  

Solved without the slightest clue what the theme was… def harder than a normal Thursday

Benbini 6:48 AM  

Agree with Conrad's Medium, took me some Furrowing of Brow to grok the theme but it wasn't that much of an obstacle to reasonably smooth progress. The WOEs (LACERTA, HINNY, et) were nicely spread out so no one area felt particularly unfair. Good puzzle.

Lewis 7:06 AM  

Crossword superstar Paolo Pasco Jeopardy watch, day six ...

Victory once again, and impressive, as Paolo didn't land on a single Daily Double. He won by betting big on the Final Jeopardy clue, which was "In April 2025 the Empire State Building was lit up green to celebrate the 100th anniversary of this novel’s publication" -- (answer in reply).

His winnings now total $162,117.

Anonymous 7:06 AM  

Well, being a West coaster I never get to comment before the comments are filled up, but today I did this on the road between New Delhi and Jaipur so finished before Rex was out of bed. Definitely got hung up on the hinny- hue cross. But a perfect level of difficulty for a long drive

Lewis 7:08 AM  

FJ answer -- "What is The Great Gatsby?"

Anonymous 7:16 AM  

I had a problem there too. I didn't think ",cuz" was correct there as that would have been short for cousin. I thought Rex would havs shown a quick fix for the whole hinny hue cuz area.

Rich Glauber 7:17 AM  

Great puzzle, I got the theme fairly quickly, so that helped. Last letter was that H in HINNY and HUE, which was Naticky, but so it goes. Gideon defeated the Midianites, not the Midonites.

kitshef 7:21 AM  

Tougher than an average Thursday, but I think that was more about the grid design than the theme.

The theme actually helped a bit as I could often guess at the middle parts of the words. But with no really long entries in the grid it's just constant zigging and zagging, and seven-letter entries tend to be the hardest, I find. They can be single words, two-word phrases, or three-word phrases and are rarely crosswordese.

Andy Freude 7:25 AM  

Phew! Came here expecting Rex to rate this puzzle easy-medium, after I wrestled with it far over my average time. Tough but fair, I liked this one more than the usual Thursday. Kicked my *ss, but did it in a crosswordy, non-cutesy way.

EvaDE instead of ELUDE made that NW corner particularly tough. It made TOO MUCH look like —OMaCH, so of course I went with stOMaCH. Now STORE AD looked like —tREAD, and I was in deep water. Eventually sorted it all out, to my great satisfaction. This kind of challenge is really fun. Nice work, Adam Wagner!

Son Volt 7:36 AM  

Wonderful puzzle - nuanced trickery and well filled. Similar to the big guy - took awhile to get the inside theme - but was able to use it for the final two themers.

Tull

OVER UNDER, CRANE GAME, PRIZE POTS all top notch longs. GLEANED, BERATED, INERTIA - the overall fill is clean and splashy. Learned LACERTA. There was a discussion of HINNY here years ago - I’ve only encountered the term in crosswords.

My Morning Jacket

Highly enjoyable Thursday morning solve. For the righteous among us - TCM showed A Place in the Sun last night with the great Montgomery Clift and a young Shelley Winters. Never to be seen on TMC.

Moses come ridin' up on a quasar

Anonymous 7:51 AM  

Pretty early on got the theme with PELICAN / PECAN. Was shocked Rex had so much trouble with this!

RooMonster 7:53 AM  

Hey All !
NW corner impossible today. Had to run crying to Google thrice, for SLURS, OTHELLO and SHOFARS, and was still stumped. Finally figured out the Themer up there, which begat DOAH, and somehow figured out the unknown whatzit RSSFEED. And yet still finished with an error. TEASEs/ELCIs, even though I KNEW it was ELCID. Ah, me.

Rest of puz put up a decent fight, but got through it in a timely manner, 18 minutes, with final time of 28 minutes, which means 10 was spent in frustration and Google in that NW. Ouch.

Neat theme idea, small words inside bigger words, which make a third legitimate word, not just gibberish.

So, thanks for the struggle today, Adam. And the different type puz.

Have a great Thursday!

Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Lewis 8:06 AM  

Lovely moment: I was stuck on the corner of _inny and _ue, thinking of all the letters that could go in that square. I left it blank, went elsewhere. While I was elsewhere, my brain tapped me on the shoulder and excitedly whispered “HINNY!”

Lovely moment: About halfway through, after having placed in three theme answers, seeing the trick. Oh, that was sweet!

Other lovely moments as well. The numerous ahas at cracking oblique clues. The inner LOL at the PELICAN clue/answer. The dรฉjร  vu at 5D – [Gets away from] – the ELUDES or EVADES kealoa we saw less than a week ago.

Not to mention the overall shine of sweet wordplay in theme and clues, and the rub my brain cherishes.

Adam has shown once again that he has impressive grid-building chops. This 70-word, 26-black-square grid looks like a Friday or Saturday, and is so cleanly filled. The theme is tight, too.

Bravo and thank you, Adam – what a splendid heap of lovely you brought today!

Gary Jugert 8:09 AM  

Pulgares hacia abajo de mi parte.

Took me a Sunday-ish amount of time and I'm happy I finally figured out the theme on my own with one left to go. Serious puzzle I'm delighted I survived and a worthy adversary today. This is how I like Thursdays to go.

You get a 50-50 shot at HONG KONG or KING KONG, and of course I lost.

❤️ CUZ.

๐Ÿ˜ฉ SHOFARS.

People: 6
Places: 5
Products: 3
Partials: 5
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 20 of 70 (29%)

Funny Factor: 5 ๐Ÿ˜„

Uniclues:

1 Adds the ๐Ÿฆ– Blog to the reader.
2 Helpful phrase to avoid an evening with Iago.
3 Me.
4 Existence.
5 Bird who roars.
6 Spreads the debt around.

1 RSS FEED GOES BIG
2 OTHELLO? I VOTE NO.
3 TOO MUCH DESIRED
4 SARTE ACCIDENT (~)
5 TRANS-AM PELICAN
6 ROTATES PLASTIC

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Two Years Ago: Beach vista. A LOT OF DARK MEAT.

¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯

Dr A 8:18 AM  

I’m glad I have you to explain this theme to me. Finished with minimal “cheating”, Had to google France’s third largest city. But had no idea what I was looking at in the themes. I also like a tough puzzle so kudos on that.

Todd 8:27 AM  

I finished this one in decent time. But other than realizing the main clues needed the word, LI, ID OM etc somewhere in it they were just random words with I solved off the crosses. No idea till reading Rex this morning.

tht 8:30 AM  

I felt this was a little harder than usual, or harder than has been usual recently, for a Thursday, but I finished in about the same time as usual. I did enjoy it. Rex explained well some of the features that increased the difficulty, such as (something)READ which turned out to be STORE AD, and I VOTE NO, three words crammed into a small space. But looking it over, I found it quite clean, and fair. No real ugliness, except maybe in the clue for TRANS AM: I can't remember the last time I saw "America" abbreviated as AM, if I ever have.

I liked it because it forced me to dig deep. I remembered HINNY after some searching of my brain, and I recognized what sorts of character strings the clue for HUE is referring to. And I also enjoyed the scholarly throwback to the Maleska years with LACERTA. No, I did not know this, despite my belief that I have a little more Latin under my belt than your average bear*, and so I had to lean on the crosses, but I'm usually glad to learn a new word even if it's in Latin.

*E.g., yesterday's IDEM means today's SELF.

I had to get to ACCIDENT before I had fully grasped the theme, but that doesn't mean I was 75% through. Unlike Rex, I'm willing to strike out (i.e., establish roots) in an area different from the NW as my starting point, and often it's the NW that's the last to fall. (How Rex always manages to conquer the NW first, with aplomb, is a mystery to me.) Anyway, I guess I was about 50% finished when I got to ACCIDENT. Even after getting the theme, it didn't mean the other themers were trivial, thematically speaking.

CRANE GAME, hmm. Is that one of those thingies with a metal claw that you use to grab a PRIZE inside a Plexiglass box? No need to answer -- I can look it up -- but if the answer is 'yes', then I was wondering whether the "CRANE" was the claw.

Anyway, this was great, Mr. Wagner -- thanks a bunch for exercising the old noggin.

Anonymous 8:30 AM  

Loved the theme, loved the puzzle.

EasyEd 8:31 AM  

In retrospect, great theme clues and answers. Looks so easy. Unfortunately missed the theme entirely as I blundered through the downs and crosses, getting a foothold in the SW and working my way to the SE and then to NW, finally having to look up RSSFEED to get the NE. As usual, also had to wrestle with EvaDE vs ELUDE to get the happy music, and hopefully I’ll remember LACERTA for the next time.

Anonymous 8:33 AM  

The OM in TOOMUCH gave me a rough idea of theme, which I got pretty quickly. Ended up right around average time.

Was actually reading about hybrids after coming across the mention of a Wholphin in a NYT science section article that will be in next weeks print edition. (Need to see that word in the puzzle soon). That linked to this pretty interesting article on hybrids: https://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/14/science/14creatures.html

Keith 8:38 AM  

Ligers feature pretty prominently in the movie Napoleon Dynamite, if I recall correctly. But that’s about it outside of crosswords.

Jim 8:41 AM  

Medium. I liked how *possible* answers were not *right* answers, especially in the North. Had to fiddle and suss out what finally worked. HUE for me was a gimme; HINNY was something new I learned today. Figured out the gimmick on PELICAN as I was skipping around, which helped me on the others I'd skipped/saved for later. Overall, quite enjoyable and tricky in smart ways that I appreciate.

Anonymous 8:44 AM  

I, too, got the theme with REEVE. I think it's because Reeve has to be there somehow with Christopher and Superman in the clue. I got nothing in the NW to get started. I came down the east side and then worked into the west. Lovely puzzle!

Jimbo 8:44 AM  

For the second time in as many weeks the theme clues were not italicized when I printed out a version. NYT needs to do something about this.

Elision 8:46 AM  

PELICAN was my favorite. What a cute clue and answer! Loved it.

andrew 8:54 AM  

A CHALLENGING rating from Rex is indeed a RAREEVENT!

Anonymous 9:01 AM  

Ugly and not fun.

SouthsideJohnny 9:04 AM  

I had pretty good luck working my way around the grid and filling in the theme answers from the crosses. I couldn’t discern the theme concept and kept looking / hoping for a reveal, but no such luck. I’m also a little surprised that the NYT went with this type of a theme without the “assist” circles, which ironically would have been useful today absent the reveal. I guess a bunch of us have been clamoring for something “old school” and today we got it.

The other thing I noticed was the prevalence of green-paintish entries like STORE AD, PRIZE POTS, and CRANE GAME. It wasn’t an unenjoyable puzzle to solve - but it would have been more satisfying if I was able to discern the theme.

Tim Carey 9:04 AM  

Same here. Gave up on the themed clues and just solved from the crosses. Didn't understand the themers until I read about the puzzle on Wordplay.

I never spend anytime on thinking about the themers once the puzzle is filled in. Once I get the Happy Music I'm outta there.

Smith 9:06 AM  

Whew. Tough one, def leaning towards challenging. Did not get the theme *at all*. Knew HINNY but hemmed and hawed over HUE, just not seeing it until the very end. So according to ?@Lewis ?@Rex ?@I don't remember... I don't get credit for "solving" because I couldn't grok the theme! Oh, well.

Anonymous 9:08 AM  

Where do see the theme of the puzzle? I’m using the NYT app on my iPhone. TIA

Anonymous 9:15 AM  

When I confidently plopped down RSSFEED in 1A I thought "This is going to be a piece of cake." But despite filling in the NW easily, I struggled with many of the other clues. It didn't help that I had GRANDAM instead of TRANSAM for quite a while. I didn't fully grasp the theme until I came here. The closest I got to "getting it" was ACCIDENT. I could see ID (and had noticed OM from the get go), and I could see ACCENT, but I couldn't put two and two together, and the words in the other theme answers didn't really pop out at me in the same way. I felt frustrated during the solve but satisfied at the end, a sign of a good puzzle.

Liveprof 9:16 AM  

If ever there were a place where there is no need to put an asterisk in "ass," it's here, these days. If you do put one in, let's consider it an assterisk?

oconomowoc 9:24 AM  

Does anyone else begin solving on the bottom and right edges? Years ago I would start in the upper left. But when I tried the lower right, it became much easier. (I'm guessing it's because the final letters line up, and many words have obvious suffixes.) I tried going back to the upper left but I always have trouble starting there.

I think Rex ALWAYS starts in the upper left, and he's the expert!

egsforbreakfast 9:44 AM  

Daniel Boone once got BERATED by a teacher because his homework got bearated.

Where's Ertia? I've experienced plenty of slothfullness, so I know I've been INERTIA.

Motto for those who pine for a return to the gold standard: INGOT We Trust

I always told my father to put on jeans OVERUNDER wear. In case of DOODAD.

Rosh Hashana horns will be blown next week SHOFARS I know.

I got the gimmick pretty quickly, and it helped immensely in the rest of my solve. I loved the notion of burying a word AMID another to make a third. Thanks for a great puzzle, Adam Wagner.

mathgent 9:50 AM  

I had figured out the theme when I saw REEVE in RAREEVENT. But I was stalled in the NW. I knew there had to be a themer in there. Could it be at 17A? OM in one of the senses? Yes! TOOMUCH. What a clever boy am I.

walrus 9:55 AM  

age mate? despite the dictionary entries, i cannot believe this is a phrase humans use.

for thursday i always recommend skipping anything that looks like a theme clue. that worked in my favour as i didn't get stuck trying to parse cryptics and instead had an easy-medium puzzle after starting to work the acrosses. the biblical references up top were not a godsend, and fill such as if not, crane game, store ad, & i vote no didn't elevate the experience. at least plasma wasn't a television reference.

Unknown 9:56 AM  

@Anonymous 7:16 AM: CUZ is also a slangy abbreviation for "Because", as in "CUZ I said so".

Michael 10:00 AM  

Never was a Metallica fan (no shade but just not into metal), but Lars Ulrich is forever associated with the Napster wars in my mind. Who “won” there is still debatable.

Steve Washburne 10:01 AM  

For some reason I found this of average difficulty: significantly faster than average, way off record time. Never sussed the theme until Rex's explanation, but they were all evident from crosses. HINNY, HUE, and LACERTA were right in my wheelhouse. Did have to cheat on LARS Ulrich (my pop music knowledge ended with the Beach Boys.)
Congrats on a magnificent construction!

BlueStater 10:08 AM  

A nasty puzzle that should never have been published, full of mistakes and non-words.

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