| COQUET | A technique of hitting a ball in a lawn game played with hoops and mallets (6) |
| STROKE | Single movement repeated in rowing or swimming; or, a method of hitting a ball in tennis or golf (6) |
| CROQUET | Described in G. K. Chesterton's essay The Perfect Game, a lawn game played with mallets and hoops (7) |
| CROQUETMALLET | Alice used a flamingo in place of one of these in a lawn game |
| RAQUET | Technique or action of hitting an opponents ball in a traditional lawn game played with mallets and |
| BARREL | Container of staves bound with hoops traditionally made by a cooper; or, the belly of a horse (6) |
| QUETTA | Final of a lawn game going the army in Pakistan (6) |
| TEEOFF | Act of hitting a golf ball from the teeing ground (3,3) |
| HEADER | Way of hitting a football (6) |
| LOBBED | Threw (a ball) in a high arc |
| ISLAND | Bed in a lawn, for example (6) |
| SEEDED | Put in a lawn |
| AERATE | Poke holes in a lawn |
| PONCHO | Garment with hoop refashioned around tops of neck and collar |
| IMPASTO | Mastered by Rembrandt, a technique of applying oil paints thickly with a brush or a palette knife to achieve a surface texture in relief on a canvas or panel (7) |
| BOCCE | Lawn game played with a ball known as a pallino |
| CARVING | The act or art of sculpture in ivory, stone, wood etc; the dendroglyph, figure or form created; the process of cutting up roasted meat at a table; or, a technique of turning in skiing (7) |
| GEORGESSEURAT | French artist born in 1859 who pioneered a technique of painting in small dots of colour (7,6) |
| TEEUP | Place a ball in a position to start a game of golf (3,2) |
| LINOCUT | Term applied to a technique of making a design from a piece of vinyl flooring mounted on a wooden block; or, the print so created (7) |