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

Rowing’s answer to snowcross, BMX and beach volleyball is coming to LA

about 10 hours ago
A picture


At a point when most rowers are pounding away on rivers in the wind and rain through the dark winter months, a new breed are honing their skills in brighter climes surrounded by sun, sand and waves, all the while dreaming of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.Out of 17 sports that proposed an extra discipline to the International Olympic Committee, rowing came out on top with its beach sprints format added to the LA 2028 programme.While many may have noticed the addition of five new sports in baseball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash, a mini-revolution is happening on the water within a sport that will no longer have a lightweight category but will have five coastal rowing events in 2028.Coastal beach sprints shake up this most traditional and predictable of sports by taking the core elements of rowing – a need for extreme levels of fitness and psychological toughness – and adding new layers of jeopardy and a beach-party vibe.The discipline involves a head-to-head format and begins on land with athletes running down the beach and jumping into their boats at the water’s edge, then racing out around a buoy before hurtling back to dry land, leaping out of their boats and sprinting up the beach.

With frequent close finishes, their final move is to hurl themselves through the air to hit the finish line buzzer first and land, usually, with a face full of sand,In a world where people have greater choice over which sports to watch and participate in, and minor sports’ world federations are considering how to stay popular and relevant, coastal rowing offers a less predictable and more entertaining format, while simultaneously reconnecting with a historic activity that dates back to around 1900BC in ancient Egypt where it was a significant mode of transport,We might be a footballing nation first but this is a great addition for Team GB as we also excel at sitting-down sports and boats are part of our national island identity,We also gain a new impetus to revitalise sport and activity around the coastline in areas that have become some of the most socially and economically challenged parts of each of the home nations,The Welsh government identified that its major sports event funding was going into big cities and realised the importance of reaching and engaging a different part of the population by hosting the coastal rowing world championships in Saundersfoot and developing the Wales international coastal centre there.

Scotland has embraced the sport with St Andrews University investing in the wider flat boats used to row on the rougher waves and stepping up to become one of Britain’s 11 coastal sculling academies at East Sands Beach.Meanwhile, Glenarm in County Antrim hosted the All-Ireland Coastal Rowing Championships this summer for both beach sprint and endurance coastal rowing events.England’s coastal academies include clubs in Tynemouth, Scarborough, Whitby and Lowestoft, alongside many south coast clubs with a strong heritage in the activity.Sandbanks in Dorset was the venue for the first Commonwealth Beach Sprint Championships in 2018, followed by Namibia in 2022, and Barbados next weekend.Britain’s Guin Batten, a member of the silver-medal quadruple sculls crew from Sydney 2000 and one of the first British female rowers to stand on a podium, has been masterminding the logistical and political course to get to this point.

As chair of the World Rowing coastal commission in her spare time (and deputy chief executive of Volleyball England the rest of the time), Batten describes the two disciplines of coastal and classic rowing as the “yin and yang of the sport”, different yet beautifully complementary, both at their core about brilliant boat skills and athletic prowess and yet each providing such a contrasting spectacle to watch or participate in.Boat costs and accessibility issues have been cleverly reduced – the wider boats are suitable for beginners and those racing at the highest level, unlike the incredibly narrow hulls that require significant expertise to master in still-water rowing.Countries don’t have to fly their equipment over as a pool of boats is provided, adding another unpredictable factor as participants won’t try out the actual boat they’ll race in until two days before they compete.At that point, they’ll need to study the boats and in particular the fin positions on the hull, which will be key to working out the optimal “buoy-rounding” techniques, all the time knowing they’ll need to judge everything again on the day once they see the size of the waves that Mother Nature chooses to throw at them.New Zealand’s Emma Twigg, the 2024 Olympic champion and five-time Olympian, has reinvigorated her love for being in a boat by taking up the coastal discipline and won at the recent world championships in Turkey.

Twigg told me she had fallen in love with beach sprints because of the “closeness of the racing”, “the beach volleyball vibes”, plus the benefit that you can watch the entire race from start to finish in the mini-stadium area, avoiding one of the insurmountable challenges of Olympic still-water rowing where you cannot ever see the whole 2km distance from one vantage point.Like their classic still-water cousins, coastal rowers will still need to develop a formidable physiology that can both sprint and endure to compete in up to three races in a day.Each race is a lung-busting, all-out effort with an arm-wrenching, shoulder-shuddering effort to make a 180-degree turn round the buoy mid-race.New Zealand’s Olympian Finn Hamill missed the buoy by centimetres to get knocked out at the recent world championships, while Moritz Wolff, the leading favourite from Germany, stumbled in the semi-final in the beach sprint allowing Spain’s Ander Martin to come through in the closing seconds to face the reigning American champion, Chris Bak, in the final who held on to retain his title.There’s a mix of existing rowers transitioning to this new discipline and others coming in from coastal clubs, while sports scientists and performance directors work out what future coastal Olympians will look like.

The world’s best coastal rowers will share the Long Beach LA venue alongside open-water swimmers, windsurfers, foil and kitesurfing champions over the fortnight of the Games and show a different side to this otherwise seemingly strait-laced sport.Rowing’s answer to snowcross, BMX and beach volleyball is coming to LA, but if you live near the coast, then it may be coming to a beach near you soon too.
recentSee all
A picture

Paramount sweetens bid for Warner Brothers with Ellison guarantee; UK economy growth downgraded – as it happened

Media news: Paramount has improved its hostile takeover offer for Warner Brothers, as it wrestles with Netflix to take control of the movie studio, streaming and cable operator.Paramount is now offering a personal financial guarantee worth more than $40bn from Oracle chairman Larry Ellison, the father of Paramount CEO David Ellison. This guarantee is designed to resolve doubts about the financing of Paramount’s offer.It is alaso beefing up its reverse break-up fee (payable if Paramount can’t get the deal past regulators) to $5.8bn, to match Netflix’s

about 2 hours ago
A picture

Larry Ellison provides personal guarantee for Paramount takeover of Warner Bros Discovery

The tech billionaire Larry Ellison has agreed to provide a personal guarantee of more than $40bn for Paramount Skydance’s fight to gain control of Warner Bros Discovery, amid an extraordinary corporate battle over the entertainment giant.WBD urged shareholders to reject a $108.4bn hostile takeover bid from Paramount – which is controlled by the Ellisons – last week, having agreed to sell its storied movie studios, HBO cable network and streaming service to Netflix in a $82.7bn deal earlier this month.WBD also accused Paramount of having “consistently misled” investors by claiming its offer had a “full backstop” – a safety net to ensure it has sufficient funds – from the Ellisons

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Chinese robotaxis due in London next year as Lyft and Uber reveal tie-ups

Chinese robotaxis are due to be on the streets of London next year after the US ride-hailing companies Lyft and Uber announced tie-ups with Beijing-based Baidu to deploy its self-driving technology.Lyft is the third firm to announce plans to introduce self-driving taxis to the UK capital next year, after Uber and Waymo, the main operator of robotaxis in the US.Its ride-hailing services are the major rival to Uber’s in the US and Canada, and this year Lyft expanded into Europe after acquiring the Freenow app in the summer.While Uber had signed a deal to work with Baidu in the summer in other global markets, it had not until now said that the Chinese tech company’s Apollo Go cars were planned for London. It had previously announced its services would be operated with self-driving technology from the UK-US firm Wayve

about 5 hours ago
A picture

MPs question UK Palantir contracts after investigation reveals security concerns

UK MPs have raised concerns about the government’s contracts with Palantir after an investigation published in Switzerland highlighted allegations about the suitability and security of its products.The investigation by the Zurich-based research collective WAV and the Swiss online magazine Republik details Palantir’s efforts, over the course of seven years, to sell its products to Swiss federal agencies.Palantir is a US company that provides software to integrate and analyse data scattered across different systems, such as in the health service. It also provides artificial intelligence-enabled military targeting systems.The investigation cites an expert report, internal to the Swiss army, that assessed Palantir’s status as a US company meant there was a possibility sensitive data shared with it could be accessed by the US government and intelligence services

about 6 hours ago
A picture

The Jacksonville Jaguars aren’t a punchline any more – they’re a problem

Once loose, erratic and reliably unreliable, Jacksonville have hardened into something far more serious, with Trevor Lawrence’s control and confidence turning a hot streak into a genuine AFC threatSeven weeks ago, the Jaguars were still that team: loose, entertaining, unreliable. The kind that could light up a quarter and then spend the next three undoing it. Now, they’re a wagon.After beating the Broncos on Sunday, the Jaguars have ripped off six straight wins. They’ve won 11 regular-season games for the first time since 2007

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Rugby brain injury case suffers blow after judge rejects court appeal

Two appeals launched by the legal firm representing former players in rugby league and rugby union have both been denied in a significant blow to the ongoing legal action about brain damage caused by the sport. It means that after five years of legal arguments a large number of the claimants in both codes face the risk of having their cases struck out before they come to trial.The appeal judge, Mr Justice Dexter Dias, ruled that the judge presiding over the management of the case, Senior Master Jeremy Cook, had been right to find that the claimants firm, Rylands Garth, had failed to fulfil its obligations to disclose necessary medical material to the defendants, World Rugby, the Wales Rugby Union, and the Rugby Football Union in one case, and the Rugby Football League in the other.The case in rugby league in particular has been hugely undermined by this latest judgement. Altogether 180 of the 321 claimants in rugby league now face having their claims struck off

about 4 hours ago
businessSee all
A picture

US farmers say Trump’s $12bn package not enough to undo damage from tariffs

about 7 hours ago
A picture

Bourbon maker Jim Beam stops production at Kentucky site for 2026

about 7 hours ago
A picture

Toy touts, random spins and frantic bidding: the murky side of live auction site Whatnot

about 12 hours ago
A picture

UK economy entering 2026 amid sharp private sector downturn, says CBI

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Sir Alec Reed obituary

1 day ago
A picture

Top economists call for halt to Sri Lanka debt repayments after Cyclone Ditwah

1 day ago