H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Littler lights up Ally Pally opening night as prize money raises stakes

about 6 hours ago
A picture


The PDC world darts championship is back, but could the new £1m winners’ cheque make this show too big?A team of assistant referees walks into the Twelve Pins in Finsbury Park carrying linesmen’s flags and whistles.It’s 3pm on a Thursday, you think, they’ve probably just been reffing a local game.Then, you think, there isn’t a football pitch around here.And why haven’t they changed and showered? Then more referees walk in, more linesmen, one of them in a comedy wig.And eventually the penny drops.

Yes, “the Darts” is back: an indispensable festive trimming that – much like Christmas itself – always seems to roll around a little sooner every year.Fire up all the old cliches: “the beauty of set play”, “bent the wire”, “pressure the shot”.Wheel John Part out of the attic.Fingers poised on the 180 zoom.You know it’s serious, because it’s two hours before his match and Luke Littler is already on the practice board.

Littler won on opening night, of course he did.Nobody will be too fussed about dwelling on the finer details of his 3-0 win over Darius Labanauskas, least of all Littler himself.But the Lithuanian can certainly be proud of the way he pushed the defending champion, averaging 95 and taking the first two sets to deciding legs.Certainly there was little here to disabuse anyone of the notion that Littler is the overwhelming favourite to claim the sport’s first ever £1m prize.It took 23 years for Phil Taylor – a 16-time winner – to accumulate that sum in world championship prize money.

This year’s winner could do it in the space of a few weeks.Even Labanauskas walked away with £15,000 for his first-round defeat.And in a way there has always been a kind of paradox at the heart of this championship: an event that somehow keeps getting bigger while also managing to stay exactly the same.This is the first year in which the field has expanded from 96 players to 128.Next year’s tournament will move from the West Hall to the larger Great Hall in an attempt to meet the voracious demand that led to all the tickets selling out in 12 minutes in July.

By any barometer the sums of money at stake here are genuinely life-changing, sums that have gently warped the gravity of the sport.The prize money on the lower rungs of the tour – the weekly tournaments in regional leisure centres where most pros spend most of their existence – is handy, but still not quite enough to make a viable living.By contrast, a single run at Alexandra Palace can make or break an entire year, an entire career.Take the delighted Arno Merk, an amateur from Germany who has barely played on television before, whose first-night win over Kim Huybrechts netted him a cheque of at least £25,000.“It’s a hefty sum of money,” he said.

“I’m definitely going to use it as a springboard and go full-throttle to become a professional.I’m not going to buy a car or anything.”And so in a sport still defined by fine margins, these few weeks take on a more feverish, desperate hue than ever before.The highs can be supreme; the lows crushing.In the first week of 2023 Michael Smith sat atop the world, having tasted perfection in the greatest leg of darts ever seen.

Two years later he lost his first match, at which point all the 2023 money also dropped off his ranking, instantly dumping him out of the top 16.Now, after a nightmarish few years in which his body has fallen apart and his ranking has collapsed, Smith is back.He comfortably saw off Lisa Ashton, the women’s world matchplay champion, 3-0 on opening night, offering hope of a happy coda to a year blighted by ankle injuries, shoulder injuries and chronic arthritis in a wrist that left him barely able to practise for more than half an hour.“The butterflies was bad this morning,” Smith admitted.“It’s hard coming the first night, especially if you get beat.

”Michael van Gerwen is just one of the many pros who have been grumbling at the potential for outsized world championship prize money to distort the sport,“I don’t think the distribution is fair,” he said recently,“The world champion soon hardly needs to play any other tournament,” All of which raises an interesting counter-question: in a 12-month sport, has this show now become too big?One to chew on for the darts hardcore and the tour stalwarts,But for all the strides this sport has made over the decades, this remains its one genuine showpiece, its one cut-through event, and to an extent its rewards are simply a reflection of its status.

And from the happy costumed throngs making their annual pilgrimage up the hill, you will hear few complaints,After all, if darts has taught us anything, it’s the value of giving people exactly what they want,
sportSee all
A picture

Sports Personality of the Year 2025: Lionesses square off on six-strong shortlist

Three world champions, two European champions and the holder of a grand slam will face off next Thursday for the title of BBC Sports Personality of the Year, in a shortlist that provides a high-powered boost to the venerable prize show.Following a triumphant summer for England’s women in both football and rugby, Chloe Kelly and Hannah Hampton of the Lionesses are nominated, as is the Red Roses’ Ellie Kildunne. They are joined in the six-person shortlist by Formula One champion Lando Norris, darts world champion Luke Littler and Masters champion Rory McIlroy, the bookies’ favourite.Kelly and Hampton were at the centre of England’s penalty shootout win over Spain in the Euro 2025 final, with Kelly scoring the winning spot-kick after Hampton had made two critical saves. For their club sides, Kelly was part of Arsenal’s Champions League winning team, while Hampton won a domestic treble with Chelsea

about 21 hours ago
A picture

‘It can be brutal’: Gian van Veen learns to fly with the stars after dartitis

Dutch rising star has gone from not knowing ‘how to grip the dart’ to a dark horse for the PDC world championshipIt’s the deciding leg of the European Championship final. Gian van Veen, the 23-year-old from the Netherlands chasing his first major title, has just missed two match darts to win 11-9. Luke Humphries, world No 1 at the time, starts the final leg with a 140.“Oh, you’ve blown it here,” Van Veen replies when asked to describe his internal monologue during that moment in October. “Luke Humphries is not going to crumble under this pressure

about 22 hours ago
A picture

‘Dadgummit, let’s freaking go’: 44-year-old grandfather Rivers could start for Colts

The Indianapolis Colts have not ruled out starting Philip Rivers at quarterback after luring the grandfather out of retirement amid an injury crisis.The Colts lost starter Daniel Jones for the season after he tore his achilles on Sunday, while their first-round pick in 2023, Anthony Richardson, is out with a broken orbital bone he suffered in October. With backup Riley Leonard dealing with a knee injury, the Colts turned to the 44-year-old Rivers, who retired at the end of the 2020 season. Rivers, who has been a high school coach since his retirement and recently welcomed his first grandchild, played for the Colts in his final season after a long stint with the Chargers.Colts head coach Shane Steichen is close friends with Rivers and approached him about returning to the NFL

1 day ago
A picture

NHL warns top players will not show up for Winter Olympics if venue is unsafe

The NHL says it is “disappointing” that the main ice hockey venue for the Winter Olympics will not be ready until the new year – and warned that its top players will not show up unless the ice is shown to be safe.The men’s and women’s tournaments are expected to be among the highlights of the 2026 Milan-Cortina Games with the NHL stars showing up for the first time since 2014.However, the buildup continues to be marred by construction delays and questions over why the rink at the Santagiulia Arena in Milan is smaller and wider than in the NHL, as well as concerns over the quality of the ice. And while the International Olympic Committee insisted on Tuesday that everything would be ready on time, the NHL commissioner, Gary Bettman, made it clear he was not entirely happy.“The fact that the building at this point still isn’t completed is – and I won’t use any other adjectives – disappointing,” Bettman said

1 day ago
A picture

Mets all-time home run leader Pete Alonso reportedly agrees $155m deal with Orioles

For the second day in a row, the New York Mets have seen a beloved star agree to terms with another team.Pete Alonso, the Mets’ all-time leader in home runs, has reportedly agreed to a five-year, $155m contract with the Baltimore Orioles. The news comes a day after the Mets’ long-term closer, Edwin Díaz, reached a three-year deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers.The 31-year-old slugger had been unable to find a long-term deal last season and returned to the Mets on a shorter contract, which he opted out of after this year’s World Series. While the Mets were interested in re-signing him they reportedly never made an offer once other teams were willing to offer longer, more valuable deals to the the first baseman

1 day ago
A picture

Etzebeth accepts 12-week ban but claims eye-gouge ‘was never intentional’

Eben Etzebeth, the Springboks lock serving a 12-week ban for eye-gouging Alex Mann of Wales, has claimed it was “never intentional”, contradicting the verdict of an independent disciplinary committee announced last week.In an Instagram post on Wednesday the Sharks second row accepted guilt and apologised, saying “unfortunately mistakes happen”. The 34-year-old double Rugby World Cup winner also appeared to distance himself from the act by drawing attention to “other factors”. Along with three videos accompanying the post, Etzebeth claimed two Welsh players involved in the fracas, along with Mann, changed “the dynamic of the entire picture”.Etzebeth will be sidelined until April after an 18-week ban, for what was deemed a mid-range offence, was reduced to 12 weeks due to mitigating factors including his previous good disciplinary record

1 day ago
trendingSee all
A picture

The UK’s pharma deal was vital – but the GSK boss is right about US dominance | Nils Pratley

about 11 hours ago
A picture

Disappointing Oracle results knock $80bn off value amid AI bubble fears

about 11 hours ago
A picture

Musk calls Doge only ‘somewhat successful’ and says he would not do it again

1 day ago
A picture

ICE is using smartwatches to track pregnant women, even during labor: ‘She was so afraid they would take her baby’

1 day ago
A picture

Can a nepo baby be an underdog? The remarkable rise of Shedeur Sanders

about 16 hours ago
A picture

‘The netball mum community has been insane’: England captain Nat Metcalf on her return to action

about 17 hours ago