| GADARENE | Enraged about taking one in a headlong rush (8) |
| PELLMELL | In a headlong rush (4-4) |
| STAMPEDING | Is in a headlong rush to spend it: mag gets it wrong (10) |
| STAMPEDE | A headlong rush by a crowd of people (8) |
| GENDARME | Frenchman unusually enraged about a policeman (8) |
| NOSEDIVE | A headlong plunge by an aircraft, thus a sudden dramatic deterioration of a person, player, price etc (8) |
| STRIMMER | Be enraged about brief attempt to obtain gardening implement (8) |
| RENEGADE | Enraged about Eastern outlaw (8) |
| MARRIAGE | Old lady's right tantrum taking one in matrimony (8) |
| REALISED | Accomplished leaders deviously taking one in (8) |
| CHARGE | Heraldic device such as a chevron, cross, pale or saltire represented on a shield; a bugle call; accumulation of electricity; or, a headlong rush of cavalry troops (6) |
| SCROUNGE | Surgeon enraged about cold sponge |
| PHONIEST | Most bogus calls taking one in? Tons! |
| CAREER | Based on "road" and "wagon", a headlong rush; one's occupation; or, the path or progress through life (6) |
| ROUT | Tour around in a headlong flight |
| PRECIPITATELY | In a headlong way (13) |
| DIVE | A headlong descent into water; a faked knockout in boxing; a feigned trip or fall in football; or, from the sense "dart out of sight", a disreputable resort of drinking (4) |
| PRECIPICE | From "steep place, danger" and etymologically related to a term for rain, a word for a headlong fall originally, now a cliff, drop, rock face etc; or, a perilous state of affairs (9) |
| RUING | Having second thoughts about taking one step outside |
| RIPOSTE | Quick answer about taking one job |