| BABYBOOMER | New Australian jumper, and one from the 1940s (4,6) |
| KANGAROO | Australian jumper and kicker? (8) |
| LLAMA | Lily aims at serving regulars - and one from the Wool Pack |
| BLACKWIDOW | Boycott opening leaves new Australian spinner |
| CLODHOPPER | Dressed without the jumper and ungainly shoe |
| CRICKETBAT | Hitter, jumper and flier (7,3) |
| RUTHERFORD | Greg, British ex-long jumper and 2019 Celebrity MasterChef champion (10) |
| DAREDEVILS | Bungee jumpers and high-wire walkers, e.g. |
| DORISDAY | Who sang and acted from the 1940s to the 1960s before retiring and dedicating herself to dog welfare? (5,3) |
| URANIUM | From the 1940s to 1980s, what was added to the porcelain for making dentures to enhance the fluorescence of the teeth? (7) |
| ENTREES | One from column A and one from column B |
| YEMENI | Last of many people from the east and one from Aden (6) |
| MUNDANE | Monsieur, one from France and one from Denmark being quite ordinary (7) |
| HARWELL | Location of the Atomic Energy Research Establishment from the 1940s to the 1990s (7) |
| ORATOR | One speaks of traitor interrupting Australian jumper on the way up (6) |
| ADVOCATE | From "call to one's aid", a word for a defender or a supporter and one from which Spanish for "lawyer" derives (8) |
| TRACTION | Word for draught, drawing or pulling and one from which a farm vehicle derives its name; the grip of a tyre on a lane; or, the propulsion of vehicles (8) |
| RECORD | From "learn by heart, summon to mind, commit to memory", word for a chronicle, log or other account of facts in writing and one from which a fipple flute derives its name, in the sense "practise a tun |
| BRUNO | A man from Brazil, and one from Italy (5) |
| STORY | Fib from Sunak originally, and one from his party (5) |