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

Jamie George admits he was brains behind England’s provocative response to haka

about 10 hours ago
A picture


Henry Pollock’s starring role in England’s response to the haka was designed by Jamie George, who revealed he took inspiration from the 2019 World Cup semi-final win and admitted they risked poking the bear before clinching a first home win against the All Blacks in 13 years.George admitted he was the brains behind England’s decision to ­initially line up as usual while the All Blacks performed their traditional war dance before breaking out into a V‑shape.As the eldest player in the squad, George was intentionally on one end with Pollock, the youngest, on the other.The captain, Maro Itoje, stood at the point of the V, which, in truth, looked more like a C-shaped formation.Pollock was seen licking his lips in response to the haka with George joking that England had their doubts over allowing Pollock – who has a habit of getting under opponents’ skin – such an important task.

In 2019, England performed a more polished V-shaped response before a stunning performance to defeat the All Blacks for the first time in seven years and reach the World Cup final.Mako Vunipola admitted later that “we knew it would rile them up”, though England were fined because a few players crossed the halfway line – World Rugby regulations state that opposing teams must remain in their own half when receiving a cultural challenge.George and Pollock had no such trouble with the All Blacks themselves edging towards England’s formation as they performed the haka.George acknowledged that he wondered if there would be a repeat of a 1997 incident when Richard ­Cockerill ended up nose to nose with Norm Hewitt, but revealed England’s connection with the Twickenham crowd was a key factor behind deciding to bring a response.“It’s always a difficult thing when you don’t want to get too complicated,” George said.

“The theory was that the oldest would be on one side, the youngest would be on the other.So I was on one side, Henry Pollock was on the other.We were quite reluctant to give it to Henry because we weren’t sure what he was going to get up to – with Maro in the middle of the V.“You can [poke the bear] and we won’t necessarily always respond to it.But at the same time we felt like I put it to Maro and Steve [Borthwick].

And I had an idea and I thought: ‘Why not?’ I quite liked the idea so they got on board with it.Maro said as long as we don’t have to have too many rehearsals.“We wanted to replicate 2019 because we hadn’t done it here at Allianz [Stadium] which is something that I thought was pretty cool.I felt like starting in a flat line and then heading into the V would be pretty cool.“I thought their response to it was also good and I thought it’d be one of those old school sort of days where we’d be face to face.

We speak a lot about the connection with the fans and making match days at Allianz [Stadium] a really fun and special thing to come to.A response like that is great but then backing it up with the performance was the most important thing.”George also urged his teammates to celebrate becoming only the ninth England side to defeat the All Blacks before Borthwick’s side set their sights on an 11th successive victory, against Argentina next Sunday.“Be present, be present, enjoy it, this is history, this is a big win,” he said.“When I spoke to the boys on Thursday I said people still talk about 2012, people still talk about Manu in 2012, people still remember Brad Barritt’s try in the corner in 2012.

“Hopefully now we’re giving the fans, the 82,000 fans that came here, the millions of fans who watched it on TV, an opportunity to speak about us – like why would we not celebrate that, why would you not have a really good time together?”
politicsSee all
A picture

When reality bites: the rapid rise and chaotic fall of Reform UK in Cornwall

Resignations, suspensions and infighting lead to party losing crown of highest number of seats in the county“I know whenever I come back here next,” Nigel Farage told a jubilant crowd of hundreds in a leisure centre in Redruth, “Reform UK will become a dominant force, not just in Cornwall politics, but in British politics.”That was in February and when the local elections arrived three months later it appeared Farage’s prophecy was in part coming true – Reform took 28 seats on Cornwall council, the highest number of any party.But during his speech at Carn Brea leisure centre, Farage also warned his rapturous supporters “we have to convert theory into reality” – and reality in Cornwall is now biting.Six months on from the local elections – after which Reform was unable to form an administration, leaving the Liberal Democrats and independents to set up a ruling coalition – the party’s presence in the county is in disarray following weeks of resignations, suspensions and infighting that mean Reform UK no longer holds the highest number of seats in the authority.Critics say that along with the chaos in the Reform-led council of Kent, the farcical scenes in Cornwall, where Reform act as the official opposition are further evidence that the party is not capable of delivering beyond a protest vote

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Wes Streeting accused of ‘chaotic and incoherent approach’ to NHS reform

Wes Streeting has been accused of taking a “chaotic and incoherent approach” to reforming the NHS, which makes it unlikely the government will hit its own targets, according to a damning report by the Institute for Government (IfG).The report praises elements of how the health secretary has managed the health service in his first year in office, including improving performance and staff retention in hospitals. Thepay settlement he reached with resident doctors last year avoided a winter plagued by NHS strikesBut it also criticises significant aspects of his performance, including the way he handled the abolition of NHS England and his lack of action to stem the exodus of senior GPs.The findings threaten to puncture Streeting’s reputation after a turbulent week during which he was forced to deny accusations from allies of Keir Starmer that he was lining up a leadership challenge against the prime minister.Stuart Hoddinott, the IfG’s associate director and the author of the report, said: “There have been some positive steps: performance is trending slowly upwards in hospitals, there’s been a genuinely large increase in GPs and the rate at which hospital staff are leaving their jobs is the lowest on record outside the pandemic

1 day ago
A picture

Nigel Farage is today’s Enoch Powell and his appeal down to slow economy, says minister

Nigel Farage is “today’s incarnation of the politics of Enoch Powell”, the business secretary, Peter Kyle, said at the Co-operative party conference.Kyle described Reform UK as “far right”, while stressing that boosting economic growth was needed to “build an economy and a politics that people can trust to deliver for themselves, their families and their communities”.He told the conference: “The truth is that without securing higher, sustained economic growth, reconnecting people and politics, generating trust in the potential of democracy and importance of good government becomes almost impossible.“And the appeal of the parties of the far right – with their dogma of disruption, division and despair – it becomes, too, alluring.”Kyle added: “We see it today with Reform, just as we did in previous times with the National Front and the British National party

1 day ago
A picture

‘They all think Keir is done’: how push to protect Starmer’s job backfired spectacularly

If there’s one thing the Labour party can agree on this week, it is that efforts by Keir Starmer’s allies to shore up his position backfired spectacularly.By briefing journalists that he would face down any challenge and accusing Wes Streeting of leading an advanced plot to overthrow him, figures around the prime minister managed only to expose the weakness of his position.The sharks were already circling – there is no shortage of senior Labour politicians convinced they can do a better job of running the country. And the botched briefing operation on Tuesday night was proof to many MPs that Starmer is leading an ineffectual No 10 operation careering towards a crushing defeat in Scotland, Wales and English local councils next May.This impression solidified on Friday when Downing Street ripped up its carefully trailed plans to increase income tax in the budget – a move seen by others in government as the latest “panicked” attempt to protect Starmer’s position

2 days ago
A picture

Treasury won’t cut threshold for higher rate income tax, say sources – UK politics live

This is from Pippa Crerar, the Guardian’s political editor, on where we stand this morning after all the fallout from the budget income tax U-turn. She confirms that sources are now ruling out cutting the thresholds for paying higher rates of income tax.She says government insiders claim the change is all down to better-than-expected fiscal forecasts, and that Labour opposition to the proposal was not a factor.Where we are on budget after revelation Rachel Reeves will no longer hike income tax rates- Treasury confirms that stronger than expected OBR forecasts means fiscal gap is closer to £20bn than previously speculated £30-£40bn. Reeves also wants headroom of around £15bn in addition

2 days ago
A picture

MP Adnan Hussain quits Your Party over ‘persistent infighting’

The leftwing Your Party led by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana has had a major split after another independent MP involved, Adnan Hussain, quit because of “persistent infighting and a struggle for power” in the organisation.The departure of the Blackburn MP, who is the secretary of the limited company behind Your Party, is another blow after renewed disagreements between Sultana and Corbyn, this time over the handover of membership levies.Hussain was one of four independent MPs who, along with Corbyn, signed a Your Party statement on Thursday night accusing Sultana of unnecessary delay in passing on £850,000 in donations, a move that infuriated Sultana.On Friday afternoon, Hussain said via X he had spent recent months reflecting on his role in an organisation he had believed would be based on “a commitment to equality, justice and anti-racism”.He said: “Regrettably, the reality I encountered has been far from this vision

2 days ago
trendingSee all
A picture

UK watchdogs need to step in on rip-off bills, which are bad for consumers and the economy | Heather Stewart

about 10 hours ago
A picture

‘I think the city is falling apart’: Leicester braces for a make-or-break budget

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Personal details of Tate galleries job applicants leaked online

2 days ago
A picture

AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign

2 days ago
A picture

Santi Carreras orchestrates stunning Argentina comeback against Scotland

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Ford urges England to ensure win over New Zealand is no ‘flash in the pan’

about 4 hours ago