| NEDKELLY | 19th-century Australian outlaw known for the home-made armour he wore in shootouts with police (3,5) |
| THEBLACKPRINCE | Sobriquet of the son and heir apparent of King Edward III (1312-77), thought to derive from the armour he wore (3,5,6) |
| SLANG | What Anthony Burgess called "the home-made language of the ruled, not the rulers [...] demotic poetry emerging in flashes of ironic insight" |
| ASTOR | First lady in the House made clergyman lose his head (5) |
| LIVINGROOM | Part of the house made from existing space (6,4) |
| ROBERTHELPMANN | Knighted 20th-century Australian ballet dancer and choreographer (6,8) |
| GIVENCHY | Designer of the black dress Audrey Hepburn wore in "Breakfast at Tiffany's" |
| STRAWHAT | The rats destroyed what one wore in summer (5,3) |
| NINETEEN | Joe Sakic's number (he wore 91 at the Olympics, though) |
| TRAVOLTA | *He wore a white leisure suit on the dance floor |
| WILDWEST | Setting for saloons and shootouts |
| BUDNELSON | Alongside his human companion Horatio Nelson Jackson, he became the first dog to cross the United States in an automobile in 1903. He wore goggles that ended up at the Smithsonian Museum of American H |
| NIELSEN | Frans ___ former NHL player who holds the record for Most Shootout Goals in the entire career with 49 shootouts |
| BUSHRANGER | Type of Australian outlaw who was the subject of the folk song, The Wild Colonial Boy |
| TIES | Reasons for shootouts in the NHL |
| PRADA | What the devil wore, in the movies |
| ORR | He wore #4 for the Bruins |
| BERRA | He wore 8 for the Yankees |
| DRJ | He wore #6 for the Sixers |
| WAYNEGRETZKY | He wore #99 for the Edmonton Oilers |