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

CONTACT

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

Tour de France 2025: Ben Healy rides into yellow as Simon Yates storms to stage 10 win

about 19 hours ago
A picture


The Bastille Day stage of the 2025 Tour de France ended with an Englishman winning in the Auvergne, an Irishman in yellow, and a French hope falling by the wayside, as Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard called a truce on the eve of the first rest day.Simon Yates took a third career stage win in the Tour, only a few weeks after his unexpected success in the Giro d’Italia, dropping the last of his breakaway companions on the uphill finish to Puy de Sancy, while Ireland’s Ben Healy claimed the first yellow jersey of his career.Healy, stage winner in Vire, had started the day almost four minutes behind the race leader, Pogacar, but as the defending champion and Vingegaard rode steadily to the finish line, the 24-year-old leapfrogged the Slovenian in the standings and became the first Irishman to wear the yellow jersey since Stephen Roche in 1987.“It was such a tough stage today and I’m really tired, so I think this is only going to sink in tomorrow,” he said.“I gave everything in the last 40 kilometres to give myself the best possible chance of taking the yellow jersey.

”Healy’s success was wholly deserved after he and his team had forced the pace to ensure the day’s breakaway stayed clear to contest the finish, with the main peloton, containing Pogacar, almost six minutes distant,“This is more for the team,” Healy said,“They had to work hard today to put me in this position,Winning a stage was the first dream, but don’t get me wrong, this yellow jersey is unbelievable,”Yates, winner of two stages in 2019, attacked at the foot of the final climb to Puy de Sancy, with only the Australian rider Ben O’Connor able to follow.

As O’Connor faded, he was pursued into the final kilometre by Thymen Arensman of Ineos Grenadiers, but the Dutchman was unable to close the gap.As the race began in Lille, Yates had admitted needing to “blow out the cobwebs” after his Giro win, but added that it had been a bigger challenge to reboot his motivation.“It was a tough start for me,” he said of the Tour’s Grand Départ, “and not my forte.I was still quite tired after the Giro.Mentally, that was the hardest part.

”Yates was among those in the day’s breakaway who had admired Healy’s unrelenting efforts to keep the pace high.“It’s really impressive how strong he is.It’s not the first day I have felt his strength.I was also in the breakaway a few days ago when he won the stage and I was quite blown away with how much time he took.”The still air of the Auvergne was thick with the smell of roadside barbecues as the peloton tackled a sawtooth profile from Ennezat to Le Puy Sancy.

But despite the Bastille Day celebrations there were mixed fortunes for the home nation with Kévin Vauquelin, third overall before the first real climbs, losing ground in the classification and dropping to sixth place.Meanwhile Lenny Martinez, whose grandfather Mariano Martinez won on the Bastille Day stage to Morzine in 1980, was the agent provocateur on the day’s eight climbs.Martinez’s accelerations on each ascent gradually reduced the initial break of 29 down to a final group of five and he was rewarded with the King of the Mountains jersey.As the stage entered the final 10km, a select group that included Healy, Yates and Martinez moved clear.While Yates rode to victory, the limpet-like Healy clung on to ensure he retained his time advantage over Pogacar.

The Irishman gets a well-earned rest day in Toulouse on Tuesday as his EF Education-Easy Post team now look ahead to defending the race lead into the Pyrenees.
societySee all
A picture

Measles cases are surging in Europe and the US. This is what the anti-vax conspiracy theory has brought us

It’s easy to say in hindsight, but also true, that even when the anti-vax movement was in its infancy in the late 90s before I had kids, let alone knew what you were supposed to vaccinate them against, I could smell absolute garbage. After all, Andrew Wakefield, a doctor until he was struck off in 2010, was not the first crank to dispute the safety and effectiveness of childhood vaccines. There was a movement against the diphtheria-tetanus-whooping cough vaccine in the 1970s in the UK, and a similar one in the US in the early 1980s. The discovery of vaccination in the first place was not without its critics, and enough people to form a league opposed the smallpox rollout in the early 1800s on the basis that it was unchristian to share tissue with an animal.So Wakefield’s infamous Lancet study, in which he claimed a link between the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine and autism, going as far as to pin down the exact mechanism by which one led to the other, was new only in so far as it had all the branding of reputable research, when in fact it was maleficent woo-woo, a phenomenon as old as knowledge

about 21 hours ago
A picture

Resident doctors deserve real-terms pay rise after working through Covid, says BMA

The British Medical Association has defended resident doctors’ pay claim ahead of talks with the health secretary, saying they did not work through the Covid pandemic only to end up with a real-terms pay cut.Wes Streeting is due to meet BMA representatives this week as he looks to avert five days of strikes in England due to start on 25 July. Doctors voted to take the action in pursuit of a 29% pay rise which the BMA has said is needed to replace what they have lost over years of cuts.“We are still down compared to even the pandemic in 2020,” Dr Emma Runswick, a resident doctor in Greater Manchester and deputy chair of the BMA council, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Monday.She said doctors’ “reward” for working to get the country through Covid was a “real-terms pay cut” – suggesting this was not the treatment they had expected during the days when people lined their streets to clap for health workers

1 day ago
A picture

Rachel Reeves to announce £500m for investment in youth services projects

Rachel Reeves will announce £500m for charities and civil society organisations to invest in youth services on Monday as the government seeks to combat accusations it is not doing enough to tackle child poverty.The chancellor will launch a new “better futures fund”, which will give money to schemes helping children struggling with mental health difficulties, school exclusion or crime, with the hope of attracting an additional £500m from local government and other organisations.The move comes amid tensions between ministers and Labour backbenchers over whether the government should remove the two-child benefit cap, at an estimated cost of more than £3.5bn a year.Reeves said: “I got into politics to help children facing the toughest challenges

1 day ago
A picture

Parents urged to get children vaccinated after measles death in Liverpool

Health officials have urged people to come forward for the measles vaccine if they are not up to date with their shots after a child at Alder Hey children’s hospital in Liverpool died from the disease.The city has experienced a surge in cases among young people, with the hospital warning parents last week that the spike in infections was due to falling rates of uptake of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine.The child was ill with measles and other health problems and was receiving treatment at the Alder Hey, according to the Sunday Times.A statement from the Alder Hey Children’s NHS trust said: “To respect patient confidentiality, we can’t comment on individual cases.”Uptake of the vaccine has fallen across the country in the past decade with rates across England now at 84%

2 days ago
A picture

Tom Dolphin: BMA’s new chair who’s taking on government despite bid to be Labour MP

If things had turned out differently, Tom Dolphin would now be a Labour MP, sitting on the government’s backbenches and supporting Wes Streeting, the health secretary.Instead he is the newly elected chair of the British Medical Association, the UK’s main doctors union. Its almost 55,000 resident doctor members in England, gave the government a huge headache this week by voting to strike for up to six months in pursuit of a 29% pay rise, starting with a five-day walkout from 25-30 July.In his first interview this week, Dolphin staunchly defended that 29% figure and said that strikes may go on for a very long time. Despite his Labour background he does not look set to be a pushover for a government desperate to avoid more hospital picket lines

2 days ago
A picture

Why is the number of first-time US homebuyers at a generational low?

A cornerstone of the American dream is drifting out of reach.The estimated number of first-time homebuyers in the US dropped to a little more than 1.1 million in 2024, according to data from the National Association of Realtors shared with the Guardian: the lowest level since the NAR started tracking new buyers, in 1989.Economic instability is keeping the housing market at a standstill, with the number of new home owners at its lowest point in three decades. How did we get here?Home prices and mortgage rates remain high years after the peak pandemic housing boom

2 days ago
foodSee all
A picture

How to make perfect bún chả – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect …

2 days ago
A picture

Lapin, Bristol: ‘We’re not in Cafe Rouge now’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

2 days ago
A picture

It’s sexy! It’s Swedish! It’s everywhere! How princess cake conquered America

3 days ago
A picture

Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for passion fruit jaffa cakes | The sweet spot

4 days ago
A picture

Noodle salad and fried shrimp: Mandy Yin’s recipes for Malaysian home-style prawns

4 days ago
A picture

Born a star: the juicy history of the passion fruit martini

5 days ago