| PAIR | Shameful spectacles at Lord's or the Oval (4) |
| BOWLERS | Overheads at Lord's or the Oval? (7) |
| MANDORLA | An Italian "almond", thus an amygdaloid aureole, frame, glory, panel or enclosure of light surrounding the figure of a holy person such as Christ; or, the oval-shaped work of art filling said vesica p |
| DUCK | Zero at Lord's or the Gabba (4) |
| PEER | Member of the House of Lords; or, in the British nobility system, a person hereditarily titled duke, marquess, earl, viscount or baron (4) |
| ELEVENTH | Last to go in at Lord's or the Spanish high jump, say? That's hard (8) |
| SITE | Reported spectacle at location (4) |
| RYE | Romany word, from Sanskrit's "raja, king" and popularised by G Borrow, for a gent or lord; or, the grass providing the grain for pumpernickel, a Reuben sandwich or the "spirit" of America (3) |
| BATON | Keep playing at Lords, or used to keep time at the Albert Hall (5) |
| SIRE | An ancestor; a lord or master; a historical term of address for a king; or, a bull, dog, stallion or other male animal when kept for breeding (4) |
| ESCHEAT | Property falling to the feudal lord or the state when heirless (7) |
| NAIK | Lord or governor; corporal of Indian infantry (4) |
| SHIP | Ending for lord or lady? (4) |
| OVER | Word with "lord" or "board" |
| CRICKET | Played at Lord's or on a village green, ball game considered England's national summer sport (7) |
| TATTOO | Thanks teetotaller with spectacles at the military display |
| LORGNETTE | Foolishly let rent go towards spectacles at the opera (9) |
| FOURTEEN | Where to put on, or putt on, Spectacles at Carnoustie? (8) |
| LADIES | Wives or widows of lords, or polite forms of address for women; nine of which are dancing in The Twelve Days of Christmas (6) |
| PEERS | Aristocrats; members of the House of Lords; or, one's fellows (5) |