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

Pat Cummins primed to pop the corks after bursting England’s fragile bubble | Geoff Lemon

about 21 hours ago
A picture


On a redundancy scale, attending the Adelaide Test and noting that Pat Cummins was good is in the realm of noting that the Torrens was wet or the cathedral was spiky,Still, on day four, any one of those obvious things might justifiably have caught an observer’s eye,Perhaps it’s more notable just how natural, how inevitable, it felt that Cummins was indeed bowling at his best in his first match back after a stress fracture cost him the first two Tests of this Ashes series and any match preparation before that,England supporters will spend four years until their team’s next visit pondering explanations for this poor showing, inevitably including much examination of the lack of chances for their bowlers to adjust to Australian conditions,Cummins spent five months in the gym and the nets without once seeing the middle of a ground, latterly powering through what might have been a few months of rehab in the space of a few weeks, then hit the pitch for a Test match like he had never been away.

His advantage over foreign equivalents is having Australian conditions in his bones.In terms of chemical composition that’s probably literal.A gentle track held no mysteries for him.Cummins is the ultimate flat-wicket operator, the breaker of partnerships, the bowler you need when the going gets tough.This explains why he was not missed during the first two Tests, when the going was rare and bloody.

He returned when required, opening the bowling with two early strikes to dent the unlikely chase of 435 before it had backed out of the driveway, then returning for a crowning third after England’s resistance rose briefly to a level commensurate with the placidness of the surface.Ben Duckett was the first: from around the wicket, a line outside the left-hander’s stumps, a length short enough to offer no benefit for a reflexive push, but drew one anyway for an edge to the cordon from a man incapable of denying the impulse.Duckett got himself out, but was offered the perfect invitation to do so; a Christmas rum cake wrapped in Cellophane.Surely a nibble won’t hurt?Ollie Pope got worked over for a while, then pushed at a demanding line for a low edge.It would have bounced well in front of first slip, but was scooped up by Marnus Labuschagne lunging across from second.

But that early progress was followed by a stand of 78, Joe Root and Zak Crawley looking untroubled in the afternoon sunshine.It was an interesting test of tactics in the absence of Steve Smith, who at times influences on-field strategy so much that there are jibes about Cummins not being the real captain.Not following the conventional gamble of a part-timer for one over before lunch, Cummins went for Travis Head directly after the break, at a point when main spinner Nathan Lyon had bowled six expensive overs.It so nearly worked, Root kicking a ball that turned in, surviving a review by a few millimetres on umpire’s call.If Perth and Brisbane had been hot knives through butter, Adelaide was at least a cold knife and the butter had been in the fridge.

It took the right angle of wrist, the right application of forearm, to get something going.Cummins did, in the channel outside the stumps, a scrambled seam getting purchase, drawing Root in, his bat tractor-beamed into the path of the ball, his loss of agency the reason he roared in anguish on seeing the nick caught.In thrall to a bowler who got him 13 times, Root had not even been able to be master of his own demise.Both were unusually demonstrative, Root punching the bat, Cummins punching the air.That wicket was the game, was the series, and they knew it.

India's Test and one-day captain, Shubman Gill, could not find a place in their 15-man squad for February's home Twenty20 World Cup, but wicketkeeper-batter Ishan Kishan returned to the side on Saturday.Opener Gill has gone 18 innings in T20 Internationals without a 50 and missed Friday's match against South Africa with a foot injury.Wicketkeeper-batsman Sanju Samson has impressed in limited opportunities and made a breezy 37 as Abhishek Sharma's opening partner in the 30-run win over South Africa in Ahmedabad."It's more to do with the combination that we want to play, or what the team management is comfortable with playing," said India's chief selector, Ajit Agarkar."We felt the keeper at the top at this point gives us a lot more solidity than anywhere else in the team to play different combinations.

"There are only 15 that we could have picked.Someone has to miss out.It's him.It's not because he's not a good player."Kishan was recalled after he led Jharkhand's successful campaign in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, smashing a hundred in Friday's final against Haryana.

The same squad will play a five-match home T20 series against New Zealand next month,Jasprit Bumrah will lead India's pace attack that also contains left-arm seamer Arshdeep Singh,Varun Chakaravarthy will spearhead the spin department, which also includes left-arm wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav,India will also expect Hardik Pandya, their premier seam-bowling all-rounder, to play a crucial role in their title defence in the tournament to be played from 7 February to 8 March at eight venues in India and Sri Lanka,From 109 for three, still more than 300 runs away, it was a matter of time and on a wearing pitch Lyon was always likely to have a say.

He did so with the shape of his deliveries, a delicious trajectory that teased out moments of madness,Slowing his pace sporadically for greater dip and greater turn brought him the wickets of Harry Brook, Ben Stokes and, vitally, Crawley, the only player to get fully set for his 85,Cummins, though, had laid the table,On the final day, he will be the one to pop the corks,
recentSee all
A picture

Christmas ads put on a diet as UK ban on TV junk food advertising bites

The festive season is traditionally a time of national culinary overindulgence but eagle-eyed viewers may have noticed that this year’s crop of big-budget Christmas TV ads have been decidedly lean and sugar-free.From Tesco and Waitrose to Marks & Spencer and Asda, the UK’s biggest exponents of extravagant festive food marketing have put their Christmas ads on a diet to comply with new regulations banning junk food products from appearing in TV ads before 9pm.The UK advertising watchdog will officially start cracking down on ads featuring junk food on TV – and in paid online advertising at any time of day – from 5 January. But the UK advertising industry voluntarily chose to start adhering to the new rules from October, making this TV’s first-ever low-fat, low-sugar and low-salt Christmas.Gone are shots of Christmas puddings and sweet treats, while healthy products have made a conspicuous appearance

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Jim Ratcliffe chemical firms received up to £70m of UK state aid in last four years

Chemical companies owned by the billionaire Jim Ratcliffe had already been granted as much as £70m in UK state aid in the past four years, before this week’s £50m government bailout for its Grangemouth plant in Scotland.State aid to Ineos in the last year alone was between £16m and £38m, according to government disclosures published this week. Since August 2022 the company has received between £28m and £70m.The government stepped in on Tuesday to give Ineos £50m to support Grangemouth, fearing that without it the UK would lose its last plant making ethylene, an important material for making plastics. The government also backed a £75m loan guarantee, while Ineos will invest £30m of its own money

about 20 hours ago
A picture

Tinsel and Home Alone back in style as TikTok seeks comfort in #90sChristmas

Tinsel, DIY tree decorations, deep burgundy drapes – and Home Alone on VHS. Christmas has gone retro on TikTok, and in people’s living rooms.The app has reported a surge in Christmas decor videos, with an emphasis on nostalgia as users embrace festive looks from bygone eras. For younger TikTokers, that means the 90s.More than 8,000 videos have been posted under the hashtag #90sChristmas, celebrating a look that includes multicoloured tree lights, homemade felt ornaments and – in a post with nearly 4m views – VHS tapes of Christmas classics such as the Macaulay Culkin caper

about 17 hours ago
A picture

Elon Musk’s massive 2018 Tesla pay package restored by Delaware court

Elon Musk’s controversial $56bn pay package from Tesla was reinstated by the Delaware supreme court on Friday, two years after a lower court struck down the vast compensation deal as “unfathomable”.The reinstated pay package could be worth as much as $139bn today, according to the New York Times. The decision comes less than two months after Tesla shareholders approved a new plan that could be worth $1tn to Musk, already the world’s richest person, in a decade’s time. Musk’s fortune currently stands at an estimated $600bn.Rescinding the pay deal would be “inequitable”, and would leave Musk “uncompensated for his time and efforts over a period of six years”, the Delaware supreme court justices wrote, echoing arguments from Tesla board members earlier this year

1 day ago
A picture

Dominant Australia retain the Ashes after defeating England in third Test – live reaction

Australia have a reckoning of sorts to contend with too. Nathan Lyon, their 567 wicket champion spinner hobbled off today with a hamstring injury that looks likely to keep him out of the Boxing Day Test. Cameron Green and Josh Inglis are also on the verge of being dumped from the lineup, with Steve Smith to return and Beau Webster the next allrounder up. And what of Usman Khawaja? Not picked here but delivering a valuable 120+ runs here. Does he return? Or do the selectors blood youth in Melbourne and Sydney?Now comes the reckoning

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Brilliant Bristol run in six dazzling tries in Big Game mauling of Harlequins

This was the 17th annual Big Game but rarely can Harlequins have failed to live up to the billing of their Christmas extravaganza as sorely as they did here. Bristol, on the other hand, continue to dazzle in the way their hosts have recently struggled to.These two are probably the Premiership teams most renowned for dazzling. Indeed, they both enjoyed 60-point wins last weekend against lacklustre visitors from the deep south-west of France. But only one side brought it to the big, wide stage of Twickenham

about 10 hours ago
businessSee all
A picture

Was 2025 the year that business retreated from net zero?

1 day ago
A picture

Why is Truth Social owner Trump Media merging with a fusion energy firm?

1 day ago
A picture

FTSE 100 closes near record high as Santa Rally builds, despite weak retail sales – as it happened

1 day ago
A picture

Independent businesses: have your online sales been affected by the rise of AI?

1 day ago
A picture

Former Yodel owner probably forged mother’s signature in takeover bid, judge rules

1 day ago
A picture

WH Smith tries to recover bonuses from ex-bosses as watchdog investigates accounting error

2 days ago