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

‘I’m always fighting myself’: Mohammad Abbas on Notts, Pakistan and Guardiola’s hotel room

about 14 hours ago
A picture


The seamer on facing his former club Hampshire this week, family tragedy and his stop-start international career“Yes, this is true,” says Mohammad Abbas, matter-of-factly, during a chat at Trent Bridge,The question concerns the time Manchester City supposedly asked for Pep Guardiola to be billeted in the penthouse at Hampshire’s on-site hotel before a match in Southampton – only to be told a more important guest was in town,“I didn’t know about it at the time but our head coach told me the next morning that he had wanted my room,” Abbas says of Guardiola,“The Hilton emailed the Hampshire management to ask if it was possible but they were told no, I would be spending six months there,So that was what happened.

”It is a cool story and, in fairness, Abbas did plenty to deserve VIP status at the club.Over the course of four seasons he took 180 wickets at 19.26 runs apiece, which, following 79 at a similar average for Leicestershire, cemented his claim to be one of – if not the – leading exponents of seam-up in the County Championship.Abbas in full flow is a bit like a Guardiola team: Swiss clock accuracy allied with Swiss army knife skills.The numbers and the excellence of execution made Hampshire’s decision to release Abbas last winter a surprise, with Nottinghamshire – his intended destination in 2020 before Covid intervened – quick to snap up the 35-year-old on a six-match deal.

This prompted speculation on whether Hampshire’s new owners, India’s GMR Group, did not want a Pakistani cricketer on their books but Abbas is having none of it.“No, that’s not why,” says Abbas, fresh from giving Haseeb Hameed, his new captain, a workout in the nets before his first outing against his former employers.“James Vince had stopped playing four-day cricket and they said they needed a batter for an overseas player; so a bit of a restructure.We had good communication around it and they are good people.Still they are messaging me and I am messaging them.

They are fantastic.”We could go deeper on India-Pakistan cricket relations in a week when the fallout from the Pahalgam terrorist attack has escalated dramatically.But it is a highly sensitive topic and Abbas, it soon transpires after a question about having not played since March, is still coping with tragic news of his own back home.“The last three months have been very hard for my family,” he says.“Both my brother and sister passed away, so I took a break.

My sister was married last June and passed because of [complications with her] pregnancy.My brother was a kidney patient for the past year.We had a plan for his transplant but he passed away just before Eid.”Abbas says his family’s pain is starting to settle and he wants to be professional for his new team.Playing in the East Midlands, with its large Pakistani community, is another source of comfort, while there is also a joke that staying in Pakistan much longer would not have been good for his fitness.

“Too much fatty food,” he says with a smile,“When you go to meet your relatives, they are just inviting you to eat these things,”Though into his mid-30s, Abbas is a remarkably lithe and durable bowler, such that he is laser focused on playing for a good while yet,Given his county exploits and eight wickets to set up a memorable Test win at Lord’s in 2018, Pakistan’s series in England next summer is, unsurprisingly, a target,Abbas, though, pushes back at the notion of being a Dukes ball or even red-ball specialist, insisting he is a bowler for all surfaces, all formats.

Here he begins reeling off his own figures to back it up, bringing to mind another meticulous overseas pro for Nottinghamshire, Sir Richard Hadlee.First come his 775 first-class wickets at just a tick over 20, before a reminder of the challenging surfaces at home on which more than half off those have come.Then comes the Test bowling average of 23.18 that, of the 20 Pakistanis to take 100 or more Test wickets, is second only to Imran Khan.“I am always fighting myself,” he says, when asked about his motivations.

“I’m always trying to beat my career best things.”The question here is why Abbas, on exactly 100 Test wickets and a domestic great, has not won more than his 27 caps.“It is hard, as a human being,” he says.“But unfortunately our management, coaches and captains change every six months or year.I don’t know about the mindset of these guys but maybe they wanted to give a chance to youngsters.

Also, we do not play enough Test matches.That is the main problem.”Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionAnother factor in recent times is the surfaces Pakistan have been preparing for Test cricket, with their 2-1 series victory against England last October achieved via bespoke rank turners on which the spinners Sajid Khan and Noman Ali shared 39 wickets in two outings.After a three-year hiatus, Abbas returned to play the two Tests in South Africa that followed, nipping out 10 wickets with the Kookaburra ball and showing remarkable endurance, only to be overlooked at home to West Indies three weeks later.“Most teams are looking for home advantage,” Abbas says.

“But I think this [approach] is not good for the future of fast bowling in Pakistan.I think the coaching staff is going to change again soon.I don’t know what they have planned for the next year.”Another suspicion is that pace has been a factor, with Abbas typically operating in the low 80s on the speed gun and chiefly outskilling his opponents.It brings us on to the subject of Sam Cook, a similar medium-fast “nip” bowler who is poised to make his England debut this month and buck something of a trend towards the quicker men.

Abbas says: “My advice is just to bowl the same as he does in county cricket, to stay calm, keep to his basics and confidence will grow,The most important thing is to know who you are as a bowler and not try to be something you are not,”Coming from a bowler so celebrated he once denied Manchester City’s manager a penthouse suite, it feels like a pep talk worth listening to,
technologySee all
A picture

Pro-Russian hackers claim to have targeted several UK websites

A pro-Russian hacking group has claimed to have successfully targeted a range of UK websites, including local councils and the Association for Police and Crime Commissioners, during a three-day campaign.In a series of social media posts, the group calling itself NoName057(16) suggested it had made a number of websites temporarily inaccessible, although it is understood the attacks were not wholly successful.The hackers sought to flood a range of websites with internet traffic in what is known as a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack. The group wrote on X: “Britain is invested in the escalation of the [Ukraine] conflict, and we are disconnecting its resources.”Its success was limited, however, with councils in Blackburn and Darwen and Exeter among those reporting that their websites were unaffected despite the hacking group’s claims of success

2 days ago
A picture

‘It cannot provide nuance’: UK experts warn AI therapy chatbots are not safe

Having an issue with your romantic relationship? Need to talk through something? Mark Zuckerberg has a solution for that: a chatbot. Meta’s chief executive believes everyone should have a therapist and if they don’t – artificial intelligence can do that job.“I personally have the belief that everyone should probably have a therapist,” he said last week. “It’s like someone they can just talk to throughout the day, or not necessarily throughout the day, but about whatever issues they’re worried about and for people who don’t have a person who’s a therapist, I think everyone will have an AI.”The Guardian spoke to mental health clinicians who expressed concern about AI’s emerging role as a digital therapist

2 days ago
A picture

Amazon makes ‘fundamental leap forward in robotics’ with device having sense of touch

Amazon said it has made a “fundamental leap forward in robotics” after developing a robot with a sense of touch that will be capable of grabbing about three-quarters of the items in its vast warehouses.Vulcan – which launches at the US firm’s “Delivering the Future” event in Dortmund, Germany, on Wednesday and is to be deployed around the world in the next few years – is designed to help humans sort items for storage and then prepare them for delivery as the latest in a suite of robots which have an ever-growing role in the online retailer’s extensive operation.Aaron Parness, Amazon’s director of robotics, described Vulcan as a “fundamental leap forward in robotics. It’s not just seeing the world, it’s feeling it, enabling capabilities that were impossible for Amazon robots until now.”The robots will be able to identify objects by touch using AI to work out what they can and can’t handle and figuring out how best to pick them up

3 days ago
A picture

‘The crux of all evil’: what happened to the first city that tried to ban smartphones for under-14s?

At 3.12pm on a sunny spring afternoon in St Albans, Yasser Afghen reaches for the iPhone in his jeans pocket, hoping to use the three minutes before his son emerges from his year 1 primary class to scroll through his emails. As he lifts the phone to his face, Matthew Tavender, the head teacher of Cunningham Hill school, strides across the playground towards him. Afghen smiles apologetically, puts his phone away, and spends the remaining waiting time listening to the birdsong in the trees behind the school yard.A one-storey 1960s block with 14 classrooms backing on to a playing field, Cunningham Hill primary feels like an unlikely hub for a revolution

3 days ago
A picture

Mark Zuckerberg tried to convince us he was human. Sorry, ZuckBot: you’ve failed | Arwa Mahdawi

Over the past few years Mark Zuckerberg has been conducting a very expensive experiment. If he grows his hair and revamps his wardrobe, will it make him seem more relatable? If he takes up mixed martial arts, goes wild boar hunting, and tells manosphere-adjacent podcasters such as Joe Rogan that companies need more “masculine energy”, will red-blooded American males respect him? With the help of a small army of stylists, personal trainers and PR gurus, could Zuck transform himself from an unlikable dork into an alpha bro?For a brief moment, the answer to all that seemed to be a tentative “yes”. Zuck’s shock of shaggy new hair made the billionaire seem less like three Lego figures in a trenchcoat and more like an adult human male. His gold chains and jazzy new outfits sparked excited chatter of a “Zucknaissance”. The Meta billionaire also had a lucky break, PR-wise, in 2023 when Elon Musk, the world’s least self-aware man, challenged him to a cage brawl

3 days ago
A picture

OpenAI reverses course and says non-profit arm will retain control of firm

OpenAI has reversed course in the process of transforming into a for-profit entity, announcing on Monday that its non-profit arm would continue to control the business that makes ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence (AI) products. Previously, the company had sought more independence for its for-profit division.“We made the decision for the nonprofit to stay in control after hearing from civic leaders and having discussions with the offices of the Attorneys General of California and Delaware,” said CEO Sam Altman in a letter to employees. Altman and the chair of OpenAI’s non-profit board, Bret Taylor, said the board made the choice for the non-profit to retain control of OpenAI.A press release from the company said that the for-profit portion of the company, through which Altman has been able to raise billions to fund OpenAI’s work, would transition to a public benefit corporation, a mission-driven designation for a corporate structure that is still aimed at profit but also “has to consider the interests of both shareholders and the mission”

4 days ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Australia’s best small museums: celebrating apples, bottles, country music, dinosaurs …

2 days ago
A picture

Colbert on Trump administration’s ethos: ‘Take full responsibility and dump it on somebody else’

2 days ago
A picture

Michael Pitt arrested for alleged sexual assault and attack on ex-girlfriend

2 days ago
A picture

Art Fund to launch £5m project for UK museums to share their collections

2 days ago
A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump ignoring the constitution: ‘It’s not optional’

3 days ago
A picture

No Way Out: the 1987 thriller that prophesied a deeply corrupt US government

3 days ago