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

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Jannik Sinner returns with a win to leave rocking Rome celebrating again

about 6 hours ago
A picture


“Lord forgive me, the Sinner is back,” read a pair of T-shirts, complete with AI-generated religious imagery, worn by two exuberant women sporting orange wigs in a crowd of thousands that had amassed outside the Foro Italico’s stadium court an hour before festivities began.Their joy was reflective of a jubilant night in Rome as Jannik Sinner marked his return to professional tennis after his three-month doping ban with a win on home soil at the Italian Open, closing out a positive performance with a 6-3, 6-4 win over Mariano Navone of Argentina to reach the third round.The men’s world No 1, who received a first round bye, had not competed since entering a case resolution agreement with the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) in February.In April last year, the 23-year-old twice tested positive for the banned substance clostebol before the initial independent declared that Sinner bore no fault or negligence for the anti-doping rule violation and would not receive a suspension.Wada chose to appeal to the court of arbitration for sport and sought a ban of one to two years before the two parties came to an agreement.

Long before Sinner had even started his first pre-match warm-up since the Australian Open final, his audience was already in full voice.Thousands of fans gathered beneath the bridge that connects the Campo Centrale, the stadium court, to other exclusive player areas on the tournament grounds.Even though Sinner did not appear on the bridge before his match, the spectators chanted his name, waving flags and signs with his likeness.With the exception of an unforgettable Thursday in Rome, when even the big screen on the side of the Campo Centrale switched to the news as Robert Francis Prevost was named the new pope, the focus of the Italian Open has been almost entirely on Italy’s first ever No 1 singles player.It is almost impossible to navigate Rome without catching a glimpse of Sinner in some form.

He seems to pop up in almost every other commercial on television channels, whether during the Champions League semi-finals or reality television shows.Throughout the week, his practice sessions were filmed and uploaded online by Tennis TV, the Association of Tennis Professionals’ streaming platform.Considering his success on the court over the past 18 months, as he has established himself as the best player in the world with three grand slam titles, it comes as no surprise that Sinner has gained such a high profile in his tennis-mad home country.However, his doping case appears to have only increased his profile and popularity at home, his compatriots rallying around him in case nobody else in the world would.His uncertainty about his reception was quelled from his first practice when he entered the court to huge cheers.

After days of anticipation surrounding his return, Sinner was ushered back on-court by the announcer as “il maestro”, the raucous cheers he received on his emergence setting the tone for the night.Every single successful point was cheered loudly and at length, and there was plenty to cheer on against Navone, a gritty clay-court specialist who made life difficult for Sinner but lacked the firepower to seriously trouble him.Although some rust was unsurprisingly visible in parts of the Italian’s game, particularly in his forehand, so too was the destructive ball-striking that has set him apart from the rest of the world.Sinner struck his trusty backhand brilliantly from the beginning, he moved well and served well enough on the important points.After saving two break points in a messy service game at 1-1, he rolled through the set.

He then spurned a break lead at 4-3 in set two before locking down his game and closing out the win.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionAs Sinner closed out his first match back with an authoritative service game, his audience erupted into loud, sustained charts for a final time, delaying the start of the post-match interview as he soaked up the support.There will be many greater challenges ahead for Sinner, who next faces the Dutch lucky loser Jesper de Jong, but the most important development for the tightly packed crowd on the Campo Centrale is that the Sinner is back.Elsewhere, Iga Swiatek’s difficult run continued as the defending champion was defeated 6-1, 7-5 by the American Danielle Collins in the third round.The Pole, who will start her attempt to win a fourth consecutive French Open this month, will return to Paris having not won a single title at any level since her triumph there a year ago.

Jacob Fearnley, the British No 2, fell 6-4, 7-6 (0) to the 29th seed, Matteo Berrettini.
technologySee all
A picture

Wikipedia challenging UK law it says exposes it to ‘manipulation and vandalism’

The charity that hosts Wikipedia is challenging the UK’s online safety legislation in the high court, saying some of its regulations would expose the site to “manipulation and vandalism”.In what could be the first judicial review related to the Online Safety Act, Wikimedia Foundation claims it is at risk of being subjected to the act’s toughest category 1 duties, which impose additional requirements on the biggest sites and apps.The foundation said if category 1 duties were imposed on it, the safety and privacy of Wikipedia’s army of volunteer editors would be undermined, its entries could be manipulated and vandalised, and resources would be diverted from protecting and improving the site.Announcing that it was seeking a judicial review of the categorisation regulations, the foundation’s lead counsel, Phil Bradley-Schmieg, said: “We are taking action now to protect Wikipedia’s volunteer users, as well as the global accessibility and integrity of free knowledge.”The foundation said it was not challenging the act as a whole, nor the existence of the requirements themselves, but the rules that decide how a category 1 platform is designated

3 days ago
A picture

Tech giants beat quarterly expectations as Trump’s tariffs hit the sector

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, and this week in tech news: Trump’s tariffs hit tech companies that move physical goods more than their digital-only counterparts. Two stories about AI’s effect on the labor market paint a murky picture. Meta released a standalone AI app, a product it claims already has a billion users through enforced omnipresence. OpenAI dialed back an obsequious version of ChatGPT

3 days ago
A picture

Pro-Russian hackers claim to have targeted several UK websites

A pro-Russian hacking group has claimed to have successfully targeted a range of UK websites, including local councils and the Association for Police and Crime Commissioners, during a three-day campaign.In a series of social media posts, the group calling itself NoName057(16) suggested it had made a number of websites temporarily inaccessible, although it is understood the attacks were not wholly successful.The hackers sought to flood a range of websites with internet traffic in what is known as a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack. The group wrote on X: “Britain is invested in the escalation of the [Ukraine] conflict, and we are disconnecting its resources.”Its success was limited, however, with councils in Blackburn and Darwen and Exeter among those reporting that their websites were unaffected despite the hacking group’s claims of success

3 days ago
A picture

‘It cannot provide nuance’: UK experts warn AI therapy chatbots are not safe

Having an issue with your romantic relationship? Need to talk through something? Mark Zuckerberg has a solution for that: a chatbot. Meta’s chief executive believes everyone should have a therapist and if they don’t – artificial intelligence can do that job.“I personally have the belief that everyone should probably have a therapist,” he said last week. “It’s like someone they can just talk to throughout the day, or not necessarily throughout the day, but about whatever issues they’re worried about and for people who don’t have a person who’s a therapist, I think everyone will have an AI.”The Guardian spoke to mental health clinicians who expressed concern about AI’s emerging role as a digital therapist

4 days ago
A picture

Amazon makes ‘fundamental leap forward in robotics’ with device having sense of touch

Amazon said it has made a “fundamental leap forward in robotics” after developing a robot with a sense of touch that will be capable of grabbing about three-quarters of the items in its vast warehouses.Vulcan – which launches at the US firm’s “Delivering the Future” event in Dortmund, Germany, on Wednesday and is to be deployed around the world in the next few years – is designed to help humans sort items for storage and then prepare them for delivery as the latest in a suite of robots which have an ever-growing role in the online retailer’s extensive operation.Aaron Parness, Amazon’s director of robotics, described Vulcan as a “fundamental leap forward in robotics. It’s not just seeing the world, it’s feeling it, enabling capabilities that were impossible for Amazon robots until now.”The robots will be able to identify objects by touch using AI to work out what they can and can’t handle and figuring out how best to pick them up

4 days ago
A picture

‘The crux of all evil’: what happened to the first city that tried to ban smartphones for under-14s?

At 3.12pm on a sunny spring afternoon in St Albans, Yasser Afghen reaches for the iPhone in his jeans pocket, hoping to use the three minutes before his son emerges from his year 1 primary class to scroll through his emails. As he lifts the phone to his face, Matthew Tavender, the head teacher of Cunningham Hill school, strides across the playground towards him. Afghen smiles apologetically, puts his phone away, and spends the remaining waiting time listening to the birdsong in the trees behind the school yard.A one-storey 1960s block with 14 classrooms backing on to a playing field, Cunningham Hill primary feels like an unlikely hub for a revolution

4 days ago
societySee all
A picture

Plaque and memorial garden to mark scandal of Britain’s forced adoptions

1 day ago
A picture

Hospitals in England reducing staff and services as part of NHS ‘financial reset’

2 days ago
A picture

Eve Thompson obituary

2 days ago
A picture

A cocktail that’s too much of a good thing | Letters

2 days ago
A picture

UK woman who took pills during lockdown cleared of illegal abortion

2 days ago
A picture

At least 216 children died in first high severity US flu season in seven years, CDC says

2 days ago