| OFFONESOWNBAT | Independently, I planted willow by one side of cricket field |
| SETFREE | Loose bananas fester by one side of crate |
| WEATHEREYE | Something sailor needs at that point covered by one side of bridge always (7,3) |
| CROSSINGOUT | Going over one side of cricket field and cancelling it (8,3) |
| POPPEDOFF | Father made for side of cricket field perhaps and fell asleep |
| COMMON | Shared ground, almost one side of cricket pitch |
| TOADOFTOADHALL | Dramatisation of Kenneth Grahame's 1908 novel The Wind in the Willows by A A Milne |
| WATERRAT | Mistaken name of a riverbank or "riparian" vole, which is an expert diver and swimmer, widely associated with The Wind in the Willows by extension, a boatman, pirate or sailor; or, a person who is fon |
| RATTY | A water vole in The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame |
| OFFSTAGE | Side of cricket field (leg) not visible from house |
| EASEOFF | Stand briefly by side of cricket pitch to relax (4,3) |
| UNILATERALIST | Policy of abandoning nuclear weapons by one side only (13) |
| UNILATERALISM | Policy of abandoning nuclear weapons by one side only (13) |
| ELEVEN | The one by one's side! |
| EDGES | Word for sharp sides of blades; boundaries of surfaces; sides of cricket bats; brinks, cliffs, crests, ridges or verges; or, borders generally (5) |
| EDGE | Strike with side of cricket bat (4) |
| OFFSIDE | Part of cricket field in unlawful position (7) |
| LATERALLY | Last-ditch recovery by one side |
| ROUT | A battle which ends in a disorderly retreat by one side. (4) |
| PITCH | Resinous substance in part of cricket field |