NYT Connections for June 16, 2026, puzzle #1101, was tricky because several answers looked connected by color, sport, or object type before the real categories came into focus. The board leaned on full phrases and double meanings, so solving by single words alone could send players in the wrong direction.

The biggest traps were Blue Cheese, Green Goddess, Blue Moon, Basketball, Gymnastics Gear, and Suite. They created false paths around colors, sports, rooms, and objects, while the actual puzzle required reading each answer in its full meaning.
NYT Connections June 16 Hints
Yellow hint: Think of something creamy that goes on salad.
Sharper clue: These are familiar dressing names, not color clues.
Trap to avoid: Do not pull Blue Cheese or Green Goddess into a color-based group.
Green hint: A group of people who accompany someone.
Sharper clue: These words can describe attendants around a person of status, ceremony, or importance.
Trap to avoid: Suite may look like a hotel-room clue, but here it is being used in the sense of people who attend someone.
Blue hint: Things that are rare or unlikely, especially in idiomatic speech.
Sharper clue: These phrases describe events or entities that do not come around often.
Trap to avoid: Do not treat the animal, weather, or color words literally. The full phrase matters.
Purple hint: Different things that can be called “hoops.”
Sharper clue: One is sports-related, one is jewelry, one is bureaucratic, and one belongs to gymnastics.
Trap to avoid: Basketball is not pointing to a sports category by itself.
Common wrong paths: A color group is the most obvious misdirection because Blue Cheese, Blue Moon, Green Goddess, and Black Swan all contain color words or color associations. That fails because the puzzle uses those words inside larger phrases. A sports group may also seem possible with Basketball and Gymnastics Gear, but the connection is really about different meanings of “hoops.” Another wrong path is treating Suite as a room instead of an attending group, which blocks the green category from forming.
How today’s puzzle opens up: The cleanest solving path is to spot the salad dressings first, because Caesar and Ranch strongly anchor that group. From there, Entourage and Retinue point to attendants, while Blue Moon and Unicorn unlock the rare-things category. The remaining set then reveals the “hoops” wordplay.
Today’s NYT Connections Answers
Yellow Group
Green Group
Blue Group
Purple Group
Today’s solving lesson is to slow down when a board offers obvious surface links. Color words, sports clues, and familiar objects were all distractions here; the correct groups depended on full phrases, idioms, and alternate meanings.
Players who want to review their performance after finishing can also use the Connections Bot through the Times Games section, which breaks down guesses, streaks, and puzzle results.
For official gameplay and post-game analysis, players can visit the New York Times Connections page.














