| STRINGTIE | Some racehorses to draw - one thin round the neck |
| TOUT | A spy or informer; a fit of the sulks; a person who buys tickets to resell them for a profit; or, a tipster who secretly watches racehorses to gain profitable information (4) |
| OAT | A cereal grass with grains traditionally fed to racehorses to gee them up; literary word for a straw of said plant as a shepherd's pipe; or, a pastoral poem generally (3) |
| MISHEAR | Advise the wrong route, enough to draw one into error (7) |
| RADIO | An artist started to draw one round on set (5) |
| ATTRACTIVE | To draw one to a day of victory, in short, is quite tempting (10) |
| LINE | A ruler helps to draw one |
| BREATH | You need inspiration to draw one |
| BEAD | Aim to draw one on a string? (4) |
| DUNGEON | Start to draw one gun wrongly in underground cell (7) |
| CONTRACT | Agreement to draw one's horns in? (8) |
| PAGER | Device that bleeps to draw one's attention (5) |
| STRING | On the street get on the telephone to some racehorses (6) |
| BEER | The "one" in the phrase "draw one" |
| YEARLING | Sort of racehorse to show desire, about fifty to one, little good |
| NIJINSKY | The last racehorse to win the English Triple Crown (8) |
| IRIS | Thin, round coloured part of the eye (4) |
| CHILEAN | In church, one thin South American |
| LABYRINTH | Maize without one: thin barley, perhaps, with no energy (9) |
| STARVATION | Such a diet will very soon make one thin (10) |