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

Norris urges Silverstone fans not to cast Piastri as villain at British GP

about 13 hours ago
A picture


Lando Norris has urged fans at Silverstone not to cast his McLaren teammate and world championship rival, Oscar Piastri, as a villain at Sunday’s British Grand Prix.Norris won the Austrian GP in Spielberg after a tense, lights-to-flag fight with Piastri, the pair in almost constant competition over 70 laps.Norris held his nerve with great control and closed to within 15 points of the Australian in the title fightWith McLaren so dominant, the drivers’ championship looks to be a two-horse race between the teammates and the team principal, Andrea Stella, said the British driver was in a strong position to back-up his victory in Austria with a first home GP win.The fans at Silverstone will largely be on Norris’s side, with the 25-year-old selling out his own 10,000-capacity area at Stowe – renamed the Landostand, which overlooks Stowe corner – for the first time.When it was suggested that the Australian Piastri could receive a hostile reception from the crowd, Norris said: “I certainly hope that doesn’t happen.

The British fans are normally very accepting for all of us, especially at McLaren, so the first point should be for the fans to support everyone.”Piastri, who finished second behind Norris in Spielberg, said: “A couple of years ago they were chanting my name and that was unexpected.I am not sure I will get that again, but they have always been very accepting of me.I race for a British team.I am expecting that there will be more Lando fans than there are for me, but that’s fair enough.

”Victory at Silverstone would be the first time Norris has taken back-to-back victories in the same season as well as a maiden home success, and he is well placed to achieve both milestones, according to Stella.“The most important thing is that the back-to-back victory is for McLaren and that’s our mindset and that’s our determination going into the British GP,” he said.“There’s absolutely no reason why not, but many reasons why yes.The talent, the quality, the race craft and even the trajectory Lando is in.”Norris is certainly on a roll with a strong comeback from adversity.

At the previous round in Canada, he hit Piastri late in the race and was forced to retire, something McLaren made clear was unacceptable between teammates.They acknowledged it was a misjudgement on Norris’s part rather than recklessness and remained confident in their driver and his abilities.He came back with a mighty run at the Red Bull Ring to take pole position by half a second and then produced an almost flawless race for a win that reasserted his place in the title race.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“The speed is there and results will come, which is what Lando demonstrated in Austria,” said Stella.“So very proud of Lando, very proud of how everyone handled the situation in Canada and that we ended up more united and stronger.

”Norris goes into his home race as favourite, but said he felt no additional pressure from the weight of expectation.“It’s a place I want to win more than anywhere else, but it doesn’t change anything, it just puts a bit more of a smile on my face every morning when I wake up,” he said.“It probably distracts me in a good way more than anything.“There’s pressure in every race.There was pressure to win on Sunday, to be on pole on Saturday.

I don’t think I can put myself under any more pressure.That doesn’t change anything.More just something to look forward to, to enjoy every day, enjoy every lap, enjoy the experience.“Very excited for it.Kind of want to go there now, but I could do with a good sleep as well.

”
politicsSee all
A picture

Britain’s security depends on more than soft power | Letters

I am very surprised by Simon Jenkins lamenting the lack of soft power shown to Russia (Note to Starmer and the other sabre-rattlers. Why spend billions on weapons – soft power would keep us safe, 26 June). He writes: “Every conceivable tool should have been deployed to introduce Russia into the European community of nations.”Russia was incorporated into the G7, received a state visit from the Queen, and was added to Eurovision. Tony Blair gave Vladimir Putin silver cufflinks for his birthday, and supported Russia’s war in Chechnya

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Judge grants Palestine Action urgent hearing to try to stop ban taking effect

Palestine Action has been granted an urgent high court hearing on Friday to try to prevent a banning order against it from coming into effect.An order was laid before parliament on Monday that would proscribe the group as a terrorist organisation, making being a member of or inviting support for Palestine Action a criminal offence carrying a maximum sentence of 14 years in jail.The move, announced by the home secretary, Yvette Cooper, last week, would place Palestine Action alongside the likes of al-Qaida, Islamic State and National Action. The move has been criticised as draconian by protest groups, civil liberties organisations and various politicians.The order seeks to ban three groups – the others being Maniacs Murder Cult, which has been accused by the US of “planning and soliciting a mass casualty attack” in New York, and the Russian Imperial Movement, which Washington says has “provided paramilitary-style training to white supremacists and neo-Nazis in Europe”

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Bridget Phillipson says she wants more young people in UK to have children

Bridget Phillipson has expressed concern at the UK’s falling birthrate, with the education secretary saying she wanted more young people to have children.In an article for the Daily Telegraph, written to promote a government policy of providing new nursery places inside about 200 schools across England, Phillipson said she hoped to make it easier for people to have children.The fertility rate in England and Wales is now at 1.44 children per woman, the lowest since records began in 1938 and below the figure of about 2.1 needed to maintain a population

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Members of public to be selected for ‘honest conversation’ about MPs’ pay

The thorny topic of MPs’ pay and funding will be debated by randomly selected members of the public at a new citizens’ forum, as parliament’s watchdog said it was launching an “open and honest conversation” about what democracy is worth.Invitations are being sent out by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa), which this year set the basic annual salary for an MP from 1 April 2025 at £93,904. It is also responsible for approving MPs’ expenses, which it prefers to call business costs.The watchdog, set up in the aftermath of the MPs’ expenses scandal in 2010, will send out 10,000 letters via a lottery system in the coming weeks, and about 25 people will ultimately be chosen to sit in the forum and express their views.The sessions, which will involve a modest payment for participants of about £250, will involve two full days and two evenings of online discussion about pay and funding for MPs

about 20 hours ago
A picture

UK government agency not accepting eVisas as ID from job applicants

The Home Office-sponsored agency that licenses hundreds of thousands of security guards has become the latest to confirm that it will not accept newly introduced eVisas from job applicants, the Guardian has learned.eVisas are designed to replace physical biometric residence permits that show proof of the right to reside, rent, work and claim benefits. However, the rollout has been beset with difficulties.There have been reports of banks and some academic institutions refusing to accept eVisas, and the Solicitors Regulatory Authority has previously refused to accept them as proof of ID.Some NGOs have reported problems with clients accessing child benefit using eVisas as proof of eligibility but the Department for Work and Pensions has disputed this

about 21 hours ago
A picture

Man criticises Home Office for keeping visa fee of wife who died before reaching UK

A grieving husband has criticised the Home Office for holding on to thousands of pounds in visa fees he paid for his wife to come to the UK, despite the fact that she died before she was due to arrive in the country.Ubah Abdi Mohamed, 25, from Kenya, was granted a spouse visa to join her husband, Mohamed Jama, 47, a British citizen of Somali heritage who lives in north London.UK visa fees usually include an immigration health surcharge (IHS) to fund any NHS care the person applying for the visa might need while they are in the UK. As his wife’s sponsor, Jama paid the visa application fee of £1,938, plus a £3,105 IHS.In March 2024, Ubah Abdi Mohamed was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer

about 21 hours ago
recentSee all
A picture

1 July changes: minimum wage, Centrelink payments, parental leave, road fines and everything else coming for the 2025-26 financial year

about 2 hours ago
A picture

UK food delivery firms step up checks after claims of illegal workers

about 7 hours ago
A picture

Gov.uk smartphone app to launch with limited functionality

about 4 hours ago
A picture

China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football match

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Katie Boulter rounds off Britain’s opening day in the sun at Wimbledon

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Wimbledon 2025 day one: Raducanu eases through, Alcaraz survives huge scare – as it happened

about 4 hours ago