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

Izak Rankine is born to play to full houses as his talent ensures Adelaide stay on song | Jonathan Horn

about 7 hours ago
A picture


A fine singer, Izak Rankine plays his football like he’s taking requests.Adelaide were nearly five goals down halfway through the second quarter against Melbourne.If they had lost, they would have coughed up third spot and been in the ruck of teams on 40 points including ninth-placed Fremantle.Rankine stepped up on stage, showcased his full suite of talents and tilted the game the Crows’ way.Rankine got his five goals when Adelaide needed them most and he got them in so many different ways.

He got them by floating through the middle, by ducking into space in the pocket, by getting front and square, by banana bending them from set shots and by sharking ruck contests.He nearly had a career-high sixth after a wonderful lunging spoil and a bit of jujitsu hustling forced a free kick.He has a remarkable ability to get down low and still move at high speed.But he’s not just a lurker who kicks freak goals.He applies pressure and works hard at both ends of the ground.

His field kicking and his ability to push up the ground and pinpoint a fellow forward are standouts.If he gets a clear run at it, he’s capable of being one of the best players in the country.He is already one of the best to watch, one of the hardest to match up on and one of the most important to his team.He’s a footballer born to play to full houses, and to ignite what was a pretty plain team prior to 2025.Rankine missed about two months of footy last year and the Crows missed him desperately.

It was such a frustrating year for the club.They were beaten by a wretched Richmond and allowed Joel Amartey to put nine goals on them.This year they have their swagger back.Their backline and midfield are honest but it’s the forward line that packs out Adelaide Oval.Six of them have kicked more than 20 goals this year.

It’s a mix of the gargantuan, the canny, the flashy, the freakish, the unobtrusive and the selfless,When one is quiet, another will step up,Against the Demons, it was Rankine’s turn,Earlier in the day, Sydney kept their slim finals hopes alive by hanging on against Fremantle,The Dockers have excelled in close finishes recently, an area that cost them a finals spot last year.

And with Shai Bolton springing to life, they looked as though they might run over the top of the Swans.But the home side had a bit too much class, and their stars were everywhere in the dying minutes.With a fairly soft draw and the faintest sniff of finals, they’re exactly the sort of team you’d be keen to avoid in the next two months.GWS Giants, Brisbane and Geelong (at the SCG) wouldn’t want to put a foot wrong against them on the run home.Sam Powell-Pepper and his wife Brya welcomed their third daughter earlier this week.

The Port Adelaide forward was like a man possessed in the first half against Brisbane, powering out the front of stoppages and kicking two goals,Port were more than holding their own in a high standard affair,In the third term, he led and marked on the wing, played on immediately and his left buckled,It’s the opposite knee to the one he injured just over 12 months ago,He was as angry and as devastated as you see a footballer in that circumstance.

Powell-Pepper is one of those aggressive, high adrenalin, low possession, maximum impact footballers who gets the Power motoring and who coach Ken Hinkley adores,“It gets a bit sadder for me because it’s my last game of coaching Sam, and he’s been such a great player for me,” Hinkley said,Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL WeeklyJonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL storiesafter newsletter promotionEarlier, Geelong had a walk in the park against a bunch of kids from Richmond, one of whom, No 1 pick Sam Lalor, tore his hamstring in the opening few minutes,Apart from Nick Vlastuin ironing out Patrick Dangerfield, it felt as far removed from the years of their great rivalry as you could get,Just to drum home the genius of the AFL fixture, the two teams meet again next month.

But for all the hype over the Tigers’ draftees – and the ones still in the shed might be the best of the bunch – the Cats rolled out yet another bargain pick who slotted in seamlessly,George Stevens is a lantern-jawed ball magnet who was overlooked by every other club in the 2023 national draft,Maybe they were put off by the torn ACL, the lack of speed, and the fact he didn’t go to one of the private school football factories,He did his year in the VFL, regularly amassing 25 or more touches,Like Tom Mitchell, he plays an uncomplicated game and gets a heap of the ball.

He played his junior footy at South Warrnambool, home of Jonathan Brown, Hugh McCluggage and Wayne Schwass.These players are out there – in local leagues and on the fringes of the draft – and more often than not they’re snapped up by Geelong.
politicsSee all
A picture

Keir Starmer should be bold and consider a wealth tax, Neil Kinnock says

Keir Starmer’s government is suffering from a “lack of narrative” about what it is trying to achieve and should be more fiscally bold and consider a tax on wealth, Neil Kinnock has said.The former Labour leader said too many of the government’s achievements were being overshadowed. A year after a landslide election win, the party is struggling in the polls and has U-turned on policies including cuts to winter fuel payments and welfare.“It’s not a mess, but what has gone wrong is really the lack of a narrative, a story of the objectives of the government and where they’re working towards it and how they’re working towards it,” Kinnock, who led Labour into to two elections, said.The government had implemented “a series of really commendable and absolutely essential policies”, he said, but that they had been obscured by controversies over things such winter fuel and welfare, “all those negative things that really are heartily disliked across the Labour movement and more widely”

about 23 hours ago
A picture

‘I was naive in being hopeful’: Labour voters feel let down after first year

Labour supporters have told the Guardian of their dissatisfaction with the party’s first year in government, as Keir Starmer marks 12 months since becoming the first Labour prime minister since Gordon Brown.Members and voters said initial optimism had given away to unhappiness about the government’s record, although many were keen to state the positives they felt had been forgotten under the weight of recent events.Sorry your browser does not support audio - but you can download here and listen $https://uploads.guim.co

about 23 hours ago
A picture

Big pay days and top of the polls: Nigel Farage’s first year as an MP

Nigel Farage has had one of the best years of his political career after voters finally elected him to parliament at the eighth time of asking. He is odds on to be the UK’s next prime minister, vying with Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting, with Kemi Badenoch trailing behind.Here are the key facts and numbers behind his first year in the House of Commons.Farage has been flying high in the polls, leading the pack in terms of popularity and outstripping Keir Starmer in some areas – although opinion is still divided. One achievement, aided by Starmer, is that the public is now more likely to see Farage as the main opposition rather than Badenoch, according to the pollster Ipsos

1 day ago
A picture

‘A mess of our own making’: Labour mayors reflect on Starmer’s first year

Keir Starmer’s government appears “disjointed” from the rest of the Labour party just a year after taking power, regional mayors have said, with one blaming No 10 for overseeing “a mess of our own making”.Steve Rotheram, the Labour mayor of Liverpool city region, said Downing Street’s repeated missteps were “winding up” people who wanted to back the government.Speaking as the party marked 12 months in government after a stunning election win last summer, during which Starmer campaigned on an agenda of national renewal centred around a message of “change”, Rotherham said people were willing to forgive the occasional miscalculation but that the climbdowns over winter fuel payments and the welfare bill had left Starmer’s operation looking like “a mess”.He said: “What I think has exacerbated this feeling by many, not just politicians but people around the country, who look at this and think it’s a mess. Well, it’s a mess of our own making,” he said

1 day ago
A picture

Reform MP James McMurdock resigns whip pending ‘business propriety’ investigation

A Reform MP, James McMurdock, has given up the party whip while he is investigated over allegations about his business conduct during the coronavirus pandemic.Lee Anderson, the party’s chief whip, made the announcement on Saturday, saying it related to accusations in the Sunday Times over government loans he is alleged to have taken out during the Covid pandemic.The report claims McMurdock took out £70,000 in loans in 2020, which it said were from the government’s Bounce Back scheme in 2020. It says he borrowed £50,000 for one business, JAM Financial Ltd, which had no employees and negligible assets until the Covid pandemic.For a firm to have been eligible for the loan, it would have needed to report a turnover of at least £200,000

1 day ago
A picture

Reform UK puts teenagers in charge of vital public services

Reform UK’s local election wins have led to teenagers being put in charge of vital public services, including a 19-year-old who is overseeing children and family services while at university.Two months after the elections in which Nigel Farage’s party took overall control of 10 councils, concerns have been raised about the experience of candidates who have been appointed to roles with wide-ranging responsibility.At Leicestershire county council, the Reform councillor Charles Pugsley, 19, has been made the cabinet member for children and family services.Pugsley’s elevation has caused particular concern, as has that of Joseph Boam, a 22-year-old who has been made the deputy council leader and handed the adult social care portfolio, despite having previously expressed the view that “depression isn’t real”.Both are defenders of a Reform policy that would block the council from flying community emblems such as the Pride and disabled people’s flags over council property

2 days ago
trendingSee all
A picture

EU leaders race to secure a deal as deadline looms in Trump trade talks

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Born into crisis, gen Z is saving for retirement like no other generation | Gene Marks

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Skirting the issue: Designer dress goes missing from Bezos-Sánchez wedding

4 days ago
A picture

Fears AI factcheckers on X could increase promotion of conspiracy theories

5 days ago
A picture

Remorseless Australian bowling onslaught blows away West Indies in second Test

about 11 hours ago
A picture

‘All the hard work paid off’: Norrie says tough times make Wimbledon run even better

about 11 hours ago