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

Australia keep options open with Ashes squad selection containing few surprises | Geoff Lemon

about 19 hours ago
A picture


In the end, there were few surprises.Even the most foregone conclusion of an Ashes squad will still create weeks of speculation one way or another, but answering one question at the top of the order has knocked over the other unresolved ones, tipping like dominoes as we make our way down the list.Barring injury, the only new player in the eventual XI will be Jake Weatherald, the 31‑year‑old Northern Territorian who in cricketing terms became a South Australian and then a Tasmanian, earning his place over several seasons of unflashy consistency and a willingness to counterattack.Weatherald would not have made the squad if he were not going to open the batting, which means that Marnus Labuschagne, who was always going to make the team one way or another after getting his run-scoring groove back, will bat at No 3 rather than moonlighting at the top.Labuschagne at three means that there is room for only one of Cameron Green or Beau Webster at six.

Green, if he can prove he is over some side soreness in the upcoming Sheffield Shield game, wins that contest by a margin of two Test hundreds, 15km/h of bowling speed, and five years of being an unfinished Cricket Australia lab project to engineer the ultimate cricket specimen.Green and Webster both being in the squad means that the Mitch Marsh flight of fancy is formally over, with the white‑ball captain not getting a late call‑up despite crushing runs in the shorter formats.He could have belted a few at six, but the idea of Marsh doing a 2013 George Bailey has been quashed by the 2025 George Bailey, with the long-ago middle-order bat now the chair of selectors.Weatherald, Labuschagne and Green will join the locked-in Steve Smith, Travis Head and Usman Khawaja.Mishaps aside, the only thing that could change any of this after a couple of matches would be the returns of Khawaja as the other opening bat.

Some brusque judges of the game watching from the stands during the rum-soaked tour of the Caribbean this year may have observed audibly that his eyes are now painted on, a line that for the past two years has looked to have some justification against proper pace,Now Khawaja may have to face not one but both of the two fastest England bowlers on record,Jofra Archer and Mark Wood have between them sent down a collection of the most rapid England spells since reliable speed records began in 2006, and while both have had so many injuries that you can’t assume their availability in a fortnight, they may both line up at Perth hoping for a quick bouncy track,Khawaja takes great satisfaction from defying perceived criticism, and he might respond with a defining score in the first two Tests,But if he collects four low ones in Perth and Brisbane, he might not make it to Adelaide.

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 promotionOf the rest of the squad, Josh Inglis is the reserve wicketkeeper behind Alex Carey and the reserve bat behind everybody else, with his range being quite the luxury.Brendan Doggett and Sean Abbott are the spare fast bowlers, with Doggett clearly the next in after being namechecked multiple times by Bailey in the past few weeks.The frontline bowlers are of course three quarters of the old firm – Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon – along with supersub Scott Boland.The injured Pat Cummins will be with the squad but not of the squad when in Perth, performing his role as series captain even though Smith officially has the job for that match on the field.It will be strange to have Smith rolling up for the start of a series as captain, doing the pre-match press conferences and the toss and all of that rigmarole, while knowing that he is a stand-in.

It is already giving flashbacks to when he had the full-time job in 2017, before one of his most epic sequences of Ashes run-scoring.But will he also be the one doing the blazer photos and the trophy fondling and the other content capture in the lead-up, given those images will run through the series? Or will it be Cummins to do those jobs? The latter is the man with the full-time gig, but if he has a later injury setback then he may not feature in the series at all.For now, though, looking ahead to the coming weeks, Cummins remains the only known unknown.
sportSee all
A picture

Squad ratings: how much each Australia player can influence the Ashes series | Martin Pegan

The time for pre-Ashes barbs and selection speculation is almost over after Australia named a 15-player squad to take on England in the Perth Test. The extended lineup for the series opener hints at the need for cool heads in the heat of an Ashes series with Jake Weatherald included for the first time at the expense of firebrand opener Sam Konstas.But with Marnus Labuschange surging back into form, and the only other uncapped players being a pair of fast bowling backups, there is a familiarity to the squad even without injured captain Pat Cummins. Here is how each player (in alphabetical order) will stare down the Bazball bravado, with a star rating out of five indicating their potential influence on the series starting on 21 November.The experienced fast bowler is again trusted as a back-up after being a regular in the white-ball sides in recent years

about 11 hours ago
A picture

NFL trade deadline: did the bumbling Jets just fleece Jerry Jones and the Cowboys?

New York traded away two of their best players in an extraordinary few hours. But they could finally have made a decision that makes senseIt’s rare to see a franchise accept what everyone else already knows – that what they’ve built isn’t working. The Jets didn’t just tweak their roster at the deadline; they detonated it. In a dizzying few hours, they dealt cornerback Sauce Gardner to the Colts and defensive lineman Quinnen Williams to the Cowboys.Moving two All-Pros at the deadline is unprecedented

about 12 hours ago
A picture

The Spin | Times are bleak for Pakistan cricket but Test game offers hope of salvation

Pakistan have a new captain. This, admittedly, evokes the same response as learning Watford have hired another manager. A lack of surprise to go with, um, wait, hasn’t he done this before? And so it goes that Shaheen Afridi, the left-arm quick now in charge of the 50-over side, was sacked as their Twenty20 captain last year after only one series at the helm.Pakistani cricket being volatile is just another Tuesday. Go back 15 years and you’ll find a spot-fixing scandal that sent three star players to prison, unfolding while they were unable to host international matches, the exile prompted by a terrorist attack on the Sri Lanka men’s team in Lahore

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Mountain bike world champion Kate Courtney: ‘In pushing your edge, you find you’re capable of more’

A broken wrist and time away from the sport helped Kate Courtney find new purpose – and the freedom that led to another world titleIn early September, Kate Courtney lined up at the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships for the 12th time in her career, but the first time targeting the marathon distance. A figure at the front of the pack in the shorter cross country and short track distances, Courtney would surprise everyone by winning the 77-mile race, claiming the second rainbow jersey of her nearly decade-long career.“The competition at the sharp end is so high and the course was brutal, so I was productively intimidated,” said the 30-year-old Courtney, “I didn’t think much about the pressure of winning, which let me just focus on myself.”Despite a final climb that took an agonizing hour, a 20-minute hiking section over a boulder field, and flat tire on the final descent that could have ended her race, Courtney stayed calm, thanks to a different mental approach this season.“In the past, I felt like I had to be on every podium to feel success,” said Courtney

about 15 hours ago
A picture

Australia keep options open with Ashes squad selection containing few surprises | Geoff Lemon

In the end, there were few surprises. Even the most foregone conclusion of an Ashes squad will still create weeks of speculation one way or another, but answering one question at the top of the order has knocked over the other unresolved ones, tipping like dominoes as we make our way down the list.Barring injury, the only new player in the eventual XI will be Jake Weatherald, the 31‑year‑old Northern Territorian who in cricketing terms became a South Australian and then a Tasmanian, earning his place over several seasons of unflashy consistency and a willingness to counterattack. Weatherald would not have made the squad if he were not going to open the batting, which means that Marnus Labuschagne, who was always going to make the team one way or another after getting his run-scoring groove back, will bat at No 3 rather than moonlighting at the top.Labuschagne at three means that there is room for only one of Cameron Green or Beau Webster at six

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Jake Weatherald in contention for Test debut after being named in Australia’s Ashes squad

The opening batter Jake Weatherald has won a place in Australia’s Ashes squad and is the leading contender to partner Usman Khawaja at the top of the order for the first Test in Perth.However, the Tasmania batter has not yet secured his spot with the chief selector, George Bailey, saying he would wait until the end of the coming round of Sheffield Shield games before making a decision on the final lineup.“I think if you look at ­[Weatherald’s] performance over 18, 24 months, it’s been really solid,” Bailey said. “There’s a method there that I think we like and is complementary to those other players around him in the squad. He scores at a good rate, the way he goes about building his innings has been impressive

about 24 hours ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Three decades later, The Truman Show feels freshly disturbing – and astoundingly prescient

1 day ago
A picture

Big trouble in ‘Little Berlin’: the tiny hamlet split in two by the cold war

3 days ago
A picture

Josh O’Connor: the shape-shifting star who became cinema’s most wanted

4 days ago
A picture

From Bugonia to All’s Fair: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

5 days ago
A picture

The Guide #215: Why we can’t get enough of Bohemian Rhapsody

5 days ago
A picture

Stephen Colbert on ex-prince Andrew: ‘Pervert formerly known as prince’

5 days ago