| ENDURE | Stay firm to the last with an English runner (6) |
| TRIDENT | I'd move in with an English runner, carrying an ancient weapon (7) |
| VENTURE | Opening with an English runner in most of adventure, by choice (7) |
| CRISIS | Gave little credit to an English runner in an emergency (6) |
| LATHES | He put the last with the others in the workshop (6) |
| SETTER | With an English breed, an Irish breed and a black and tan breed named after a Duke of Gordon, an active, charismatic gun dog with a keen game sense (6) |
| BRANDT | Photographer with an English Heritage blue plaque whose early pictures were published in The English at Home (6) |
| SQUIRE | Fail to get out of qualifiers with an English gentleman (6) |
| CORSET | Stays firm, determined to maintain resistance |
| HENLEY | Type of collarless shirt that shares a name with an English regatta town |
| ESKIMO | English runner, flash one from the north (6) |
| SPOUSE | Mate, I nearly forgot to back more than one English runner (6) |
| SEVERN | English runner always going in opposing directions (6) |
| CAMERA | English runner over long period is source of shots? (6) |
| SEBCOE | English runner who is the president of World Athletics (3,3) |
| PLEASURE | Appeals to an English runner to give people some gratification (8) |
| TRENT | Time to let out an English runner (5) |
| TEES | They support drivers, of course, but also an English runner (4) |
| FEATURE | Present exploit by an English runner (7) |
| STADE | ___ was a sprint of approximately 200 yards in the Ancient Olympics. Fill in the blank with a word that shares its root with an English term that refers to a sports arena. |