| HENLEY | Style of jersey with a wide neck and buttoned placket that takes its name from the shirts traditionally worn by an Oxfordshire royal regatta race crew (6) |
| GALETTE | - des rois; a puff pastry pudding pie with figurines encased in frangipane/ almond cream, traditiona |
| GUERNSEY | Island north-west of Jersey with the capital St Peter Port (8) |
| BROADBRACE | Medical support for a wide neck? |
| WAISTCOAT | A garment with no sleeves and buttoned down the front, usually worn over a shirt (9) |
| DIDUP | Put new coat on and buttoned |
| APRON | From a misdivision of "tablecloth", a word for a barm-cloth, bib, brat, pinafore or placket; or, something similar, such as a bishop's cassock, Freemason's robe, or a lead tabard worn as a shield duri |
| ROLLNECK | A jersey with a high neck, made to be folded over on itself (4,4) |
| ZEPHYR | A rower's jersey as light as the breeze, featuring an airy henley-style placket and cooling short sleeves (6) |
| CCCP | Letters on the shirts of the losers of the Miracle on Ice |
| POCKETBOOK | A cahier, diary, jotter, note-pad etc, small enough to fit into one's placket; a police officer's "PNB"; a wallet for money, hence one's finances/fisc; or, in the US, a lady's clutch or purse (10) |
| COWSLIP | It's a mistake to go after Jersey with a flower (7) |
| ERIE | _ _ _ _ Railroad that linked New Jersey with a Great Lake (4) |
| OLDGOLD | Colour of the shirts worn by Wolverhampton Wanderers from the 1923-24 season |
| POLONECK | Jersey with a close-fitting collar |
| HOOD | English poet, humorist and journalist who wrote Odes and Addresses to Great People, The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies and The Song of the Shirt (4) |
| GIANTS | New York ___ , U.S. football team who share the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey with the Jets (6) |
| BLUE | Colour of the shirts worn by Birmingham City and Chelsea (4) |
| SPARE | Word for something lean, such as a rib; an extra part, sibling of an heir, tyre etc, kept in reserve; or, a placket (5) |
| HENLEYS | Shirts with a button placket |