H
sport
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

Tom Jordan brings a smorgasbord of skills to Bristol’s Big Game at Harlequins

about 11 hours ago
A picture


New Zealand rugby must still be unearthing loads of outstanding players.So many, in fact, that their talent spotters have grown increasingly blase.Because how on earth did someone, somewhere not spot the uncut diamond now twinkling on the far side of the world for Bristol Bears and Scotland?Let’s just run through the impressive menu of skills Tom Jordan will bring to today’s Big Game against Harlequins at Twickenham’s Allianz Stadium.Excellent distribution off both hands? Tick.A smart rugby brain? Tick.

The ability to hit unexpectedly hard in the tackle and kick goals as well? Tick, Tick.Factor in his positional versatility, a constant thirst for improvement and a faint physical resemblance to Beauden Barrett and his value merely increases further.The more you think about it, in fact, the more bizarre it becomes that his age-group coaches could not see the serious potential standing right in front of them.Jordan has certainly been a gift from whichever rugby god they worship in the Scottish Rugby Union’s offices in Murrayfield and a poster boy for late developers everywhere.When he fetched up to play semi-pro club rugby in Ayr six years ago, he had no firm ambitions other than to see the world and play some club rugby in the UK.

Now here is, at 27, fast maturing into the kind of player any side would covet.Which makes his long and winding journey to get here all the more rewarding.There was even a time when clubs in National One – the third tier of English rugby – were failing to sign him, although some of that related to the financial collapse of one of his possible destinations, Old Elthamians.Growing up on the coastal Whangaparāoa Peninsula, 25 miles north of Auckland, his local school Orewa College also did not rate among the country’s leading rugby nurseries.His father, Graeme, who ran a local garage, and his mother, Dee, a travel agent, both encouraged their middle child’s love of sport but North Harbour Under-18s was the height of his ­age-grade recognition.

A spell playing club rugby in Hamilton while studying for an accounting and finance degree at the University of Waikato, however, kept the flame burning before the chance came to head to Scotland.Having been man of the match for Ayrshire Bulls in the 2021 Super 6 final, an invitation to train with Glasgow Warriors followed and the newly arrived Franco Smith swiftly saw what others had not.“When he first came in I’d barely been in the programme but he started me in the first game of the season,” said Jordan.“Then he continued to start me.He must have seen something in me that he liked.

It was massive for my development.”His star has risen steadily ever since.Even before Jordan made his debut for Scotland 13 months ago – having qualified under the extended five-year-residency regulations – Bristol’s Pat Lam was making a big money offer for “one of the most exciting talents in European rugby” after the player’s central role in Glasgow’s stirring United Rugby Championship title success in 2024.And now the goal is to win something with both Bristol and Scotland.From the Bears’ perspective there have been some encouraging signs lately.

Despite some pivotal injuries they remain unbeaten in the Champions Cup and will be strong candidates for the Prem top four if they can reinforce their sweeping attacking game with a little more hard-nosed steel.Jordan, who starts at 10 opposite Marcus Smith tonight, senses that the next three games over the festive season against Quins, Newcastle and Sale Sharks will be crucial.“If we go well we’ll be in a really good position come the Six Nations break,” he said.“And the same in Europe.Harlequins will be class and it’s a massive game but hopefully we can put what we believe in into action.

“It’s up to us to drive what we’re trying to achieve.Bristol have come a long way and now we want to be winning.We talk about changing history; we can’t just do the same thing.The boys are starting to understand what we need to do to get to that point.There is a lot of hunger.

”And when it really boils down to it Jordan’s belief is that commitment to the cause is what really counts, even if some would prefer their national teams to consist purely of homegrown talent.“I can see why some Scottish fans feel that way.But the way I look at it I came over to play club footy.So many of my best mates now are from Scotland; I keep in touch with them pretty much daily.It was also where my rugby career took off.

Whenever I play for Scotland I’m not just playing for my family but all the people who I’ve met along my journey in Scotland.“All I can do is try and show how much I care by how hard I go and by leaving everything out there.Hopefully that’s enough for them to accept me and think: ‘OK, we’ll take him.’”His family are certainly proud of his distant exploits.“My mum came over for the All Blacks game and to see us play England at Twickenham in the Six Nations last season.

She flew in and came straight to the game.I saw where she was sitting and then we scored the first try right in front of her.As Mum said: ‘It didn’t feel real.I hadn’t seen you and then you were right there.’”Scotland’s 2026 Six Nations prospects, though, are a less immediate priority than thriving in a Bristol jersey.

There is always a little luck involved – “You could come over and be in a team that doesn’t want to play much rugby” – but Jordan’s game appears ideally suited to his new surroundings.Sliding doors and all that.Part of him now wonders if having to be patient for so long was actually a blessing in disguise.“I’ll always look back and feel grateful I didn’t get an early opportunity because I might not have been ready.“If I’d not been great or been out of my depth I might not have got another shot.

I was pretty much 24 by the time I made my pro debut but all those years before I’d been building towards it.Coming to it later has probably just drilled into me the habit of trying to throw everything at it every day.” Finally he is where he always wanted to be, rapidly making up for lost time.
politicsSee all
A picture

Reform-run Kent council accused of blocking scrutiny of claim it saved £40m

Reform-run Kent council has been accused of trying to block scrutiny after it refused, for more than five months, to produce evidence that it had saved more than £40m by cancelling two environmental projects that did not exist yet.Polly Billington, a Labour MP in Kent, first requested background to the claim via a freedom of information (FoI) request in July. She said the subsequent delay had not been explained and seemed to show the council was embarrassed at what the documents would show.Kent county council said it rejected any suggestion of a cover-up, and that it planned to release the information to Billington, the East Thanet MP, later this week.The saga began when the Kent leader, Linden Kemkaran, told a council meeting on 10 July that the authority had saved £32m by scrapping a programme to make properties more environmentally friendly, and £7

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Reform candidate who told Lammy to ‘go home’ questioned other MPs’ loyalty to UK

A Reform UK mayoral candidate who said David Lammy should “go home to the Caribbean” has suggested that at least eight other politicians from minority ethnic backgrounds do not have a primary loyalty towards the UK.Nigel Farage’s party has so far refused to condemn Chris Parry, a retired naval rear admiral who has been picked to contest the now-postponed Hampshire and the Solent mayoral election for the party, over his comment about Lammy, the deputy prime minister.In a post in February, referring to a news story about the UK government supposedly considering talks about reparations for slavery – which ministers have in fact rejected – Parry is said to have written: “Lammy must go home to the Caribbean where his loyalty lies.”Labour said the emergence of the other comments, all made since May this year, showed Reform had to act swiftly, saying he was “dragging his party further into the gutter”.The bulk of the comments by Parry, all made on X, involve him quote-retweeting posts by others about the politicians, some originating from far-right or openly anti-Islam accounts

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Lib Dems call for inquiry into hostile foreign state interference to include US

An inquiry into interference by hostile foreign states in the UK should be extended to cover the actions of Donald Trump’s US, the Liberal Democrats have said.In a letter to the communities secretary, Steve Reed, whose department is leading on the independent review, the Lib Dems said the US government’s explicit support for far-right nationalist parties in Europe amounted to outside interference.The US national security strategy, set out this month, said Europe faces “civilisational erasure” due to migration and EU integration, and that Washington should “cultivate resistance” within the continent.The document used language echoing the racist “great replacement” conspiracy theory, saying several countries risked becoming “majority non-European”, and praised the “growing influence of patriotic European parties”.The inquiry into the effect of financial influence and other interference is expected to primarily focus on Russia and similar hostile states

about 20 hours ago
A picture

Farage avoids police investigation over alleged electoral law breach

Nigel Farage has avoided investigation over claims his general election campaign breached electoral law last year – in part because too much time has passed since the alleged offences.The Reform UK leader was told on Thursday that Essex police could not open an investigation because it was now time-barred, more than a year having passed since any alleged offence. The Electoral Commission, which had been asked to open a separate inquiry into other elements, said it had not identified any undeclared spending that should have been reported.“We have assessed a report relating to an allegation around misreported expenditure by a political candidate in connection with the general election in July 2024,” Essex police said.It said the report had been made on 5 December

1 day ago
A picture

From Keir as Eliot Ness to Radon Liz on YouTube – the 2025 alternative politics awards

You can hear the sighs of relief. Not from the MPs who are packing up to slope back to their constituencies for the Christmas recess, but from the rest of the country. Finally, the year is coming to an end and there will be few chances for our politicians to do any further damage before they return to Westminster in January.The psychodrama is finally done. We can all go to bed vaguely hopeful that the world won’t have taken a further turn for the worse by the time we wake up

1 day ago
A picture

Angela Rayner to publish memoir amid talk of potential Labour leadership challenge

Angela Rayner is writing a memoir about her rise to become deputy prime minister and her subsequent fall from grace, the Guardian can confirm, in a move that will be seen as an attempt to set the narrative ahead of any leadership contest.The book, which will detail the Labour politician’s life story from her impoverished childhood and leaving school at 16 while pregnant through the union movement and the Labour party to the second highest office in the land, is to be published in the second half of 2026.Rayner has kept a relatively low profile since quitting as deputy prime minister in September after failing to pay stamp duty on a flat. She has only intervened publicly on policy issues close to her heart, such as workers’ rights, on which she warned the government not to “blink or buckle” on the bill.Often considered a potential successor to Keir Starmer, she declined to rule out running for the leadership or returning to frontline politics in her first public comments after stepping down, saying she had “not gone away”

1 day ago
foodSee all
A picture

Creme brulee and chocolate bundt cake: Nicola Lamb’s Christmas crowdpleasers – recipes

3 days ago
A picture

How to turn excess yoghurt into a silky-smooth dessert – recipe | Waste not

3 days ago
A picture

Benjamina Ebuehi’s pistachio and cherry meringue cake recipe | The sweet spot

3 days ago
A picture

Australian supermarket canned peaches taste test: the winner has an ‘absurdly low price’

3 days ago
A picture

All about the baby cheeses: how to curate a festive cheeseboard to remember

4 days ago
A picture

Georgina Hayden’s recipe for pear, sticky ginger and pecan pudding

5 days ago