| WILDCARD | Unranked player is unrestrained and eccentric |
| RATING | Unranked naval seaman (6) |
| ALONE | Solo composition by the final trombone is unrestrained (5) |
| INORDINATE | An editor in pants is unrestrained (10) |
| RUDIMENTARINESS | Doctor is unrestrained about male showing a primitive quality (15) |
| LOOSE | Latin, so upsetting in Old English, is unrestrained (5) |
| VIOLENCE | Once evil is unrestrained, this could be the result (8) |
| RAMPANT | Unrestrained and violent (7) |
| WITHOUTREMORSE | Accompanied by true Romeos, unrestrained and guilt-free |
| RIOTOUSLY | In an unrestrained and boisterous manner (9) |
| SCOTFREE | Glaswegian, unrestrained and unpunished (4,4) |
| SOFTHEARTEDNESS | A feeling of concern for the welfare of others is unrestrained daftness - so there! (15) |
| BLOODANDTHUNDER | Unrestrained and violent action amazingly handled - no doubt by director, ultimately (5-3-7) |
| ODDBALL | Old and bald, maladjusted and eccentric |
| MISFIT | Frenchman is healthy and eccentric (6) |
| FLASHCARD | Learning aid is ostentatious and eccentric (5,4) |
| STEIN | Surname of American writer and eccentric; her Paris home was a salon for leading writers and artists between the two world wars (5) |
| LUNATIC | Extremely foolish and eccentric person; extreme, eccentric fringe of society (7) |
| HOLMES | A dressing-gown-wearing, honey bee-farming, pipe-smoking, consulting detective, literary master of abductive reasoning and eccentric scraper of a violin, whose fellow Watson is a doctor of medicine (6 |
| CODGER | Old and eccentric chap (6) |