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 still have 100% passion’: England’s evergreen Adil Rashid not finished yet | Simon Burnton

about 18 hours ago
A picture


Adil Rashid could be forgiven for tiring of the international cricket treadmill more than 16 years after his debut.Now in New Zealand for his 35th international T20 series or tournament, he summarises that hectic, monotonous life when talking about the team-bonding mini‑break in Queenstown with which England started their winter: “Sometimes you don’t get that opportunity when you’re always on tour,” he says.“You land, you train, you play and you travel.”Yet his enthusiasm is clear, not just when he discusses the immediate future of a side that seems to be flourishing under Harry Brook and his own place in it, but also when watching Rashid train, play or bowl.But while he was able to stop New Zealand in their tracks as they attempted to chase down England’s record‑breaking 236 at Hagley Oval in Christchurch on Monday night, when his four‑wicket haul included all but one of their five highest scorers, there is nothing he can do to halt time.

Rashid will turn 38 in February, midway through the T20 World Cup.By the time the next one‑day international version is played towards the end of 2027 he will be nearly 40.His great friend and now podcast co‑host Moeen Ali, just a few months his senior, retired from international cricket last year.But Rashid remains integral: those four wickets took him to 19 so far this year, six more than any other Englishman.Only three English bowlers have taken so many T20 international wickets in a calendar year: Graeme Swann in 2010, Sam Curran in 2022, and Rashid in 2021, 2022, 2024 and now 2025.

But there are still no thoughts of the end; his focus remains on bringing down opponents, not curtains.“One hundred per cent I’ve still got the hunger, the hunger to play for England and represent my country,” Rashid says.“As an individual, I think that’s the biggest achievement in any sport.I still have that passion there for England.I think that when the passion does die down, or whatever it is, that’s when you think: ‘OK, right, let’s have a real think about it.

’ At the moment I haven’t really thought of anything else.I’ve got that passion, there’s a lot of cricket to be played.“I want to be part of this team, this squad we’ve got now, on the next journey we have, which hopefully will be nice and I want to be part of it.Hopefully we can experience some wins and win World Cups, all the good stuff.And I’m looking forward to hopefully participating in that journey.

“We don’t know what’s going to happen.Around the corner things can change very quickly.It’s very unpredictable, life and cricket.I always like to stay present – a game at a time, a step at a time – and let things unfold, see where cricket and life takes me.”In many ways this is no time to be thinking of endings, but rather of beginnings: a fresh team with a new captain, a new coach and new horizons.

“We’re on that journey,” Rashid says.“There are a few new faces.Some have gone out, some have come in, and that’s just part of the cycle.But we’ve got experience, we’ve got youth, we’ve got world‑class players, we’ve got Brendon McCullum, who’s a very, very good coach, and everybody’s buying in to what we’re trying to achieve.Yes, there’s going to be hiccups along the way, that’s part and parcel of the game, but we’re definitely focused and really on the ball, for whatever lies ahead.

”The desire to schedule that Queenstown trip, and the recruitment of the former All Blacks mental skills coach Gilbert Enoka, suggests there is a particular focus on creating something more from this group of players than just an XI, and Rashid believes this is a particular strength of McCullum’s.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 promotion“We feel like a unit,” he says.“We feel like a family kind of environment, backing each other regardless of whether you perform or don’t perform, you have a good day or a bad day.We’re trying to make sure we stick to our morals in that way.Let’s make sure we stick together, that unity we have, that brotherhood.

“It’s a nice thing to have, everybody’s got each other’s backs and that’s the environment that Baz and we are trying to create, and we have created.And hopefully we can, regardless of whether we have a good day or a bad day.“Baz is very relaxed, chilled out, but he’s on the ball in terms of coaching, he’s on it in that sense.And he wants to create that environment.Yes, we are relaxed, we are chilled, but we’re making sure that when we go on that pitch we’re focused and we’re going for it.

A lot of credit goes to Baz for creating that environment, and hopefully we can carry that on for a lot longer.”
cultureSee all
A picture

I can’t stop watching videos of people discovering Beds Are Burning by Midnight Oil. Send help

Oh the pleasant pain of waiting impatiently for someone to understand the point! Oh the power of dramatic irony; the smug joy of knowing something they don’t.Oh how I wallowed in these feelings and more, when YouTube sucked me into a genre I had previously known nothing about: First Time Hearing videos, where people film themselves watching the music video of a song they’ve never heard before and grace viewers with their impromptu reactions, thoughts and facial expressions.Even before noticing the six-figures-plus viewing counts and the apparently endless number of people vying to deliver more, I instantly clocked all the trappings of the very best attention economy traps. You know: the immediate, certain knowledge that – despite your best intentions, growing hunger, thirst and backpain; despite the increasingly urgent pleas of your neglected children – you’re just going to slump there swiping your finger for hours until your higher brain finally kicks in.The first one my algorithm mugged me with was from US rapper Black Pegasus, who told us he was listening for the first time to Tim Minchin’s song Prejudice

4 days ago
A picture

‘London could 100% compete with Cannes’: Aids charity UK gala debut honours Tracey Emin

It’s recognised for its pomp, the celebrity supporters and the fabulously glamorous locations, but for the man behind the amfAR gala, an A-list charity roadshow that rolled into London for the first time this weekend, the event is deeply personal.AmfAR – the American Foundation for Aids Research – is a nonprofit group that emerged in the 1980s to support research into HIV and Aids.“I’m an HIV-positive man. I’m lucky to be alive because of organisations like amfAR,” the foundation’s incoming CEO, Kyle Clifford, said.“I had an Aids diagnosis, and nobody in my life knew that until recently, including my family

4 days ago
A picture

Champagne, celebs and artefacts: British Museum hosts first lavish ‘pink ball’ fundraiser

There will be champagne, of course, and dancing, fine Indian food served alongside the Parthenon marbles and cocktails mixed in front of the Renaissance treasures of the Waddesdon bequest. And everywhere – from the lights illuminating the Greek revival architecture, to the carpet on which guests arrive, to the glamorous outfits they are requested to wear – a very particular shade of pink.When the British Museum throws open its doors on Saturday evening for its first “pink ball”, it will not only be hosting an enormous and lavish party, but also inaugurating what its director, Nicholas Cullinan, has called a “flagship national event” that he hopes will become as important to his institution’s finances as it will to the London elite’s social calendar.Eight hundred invited guests have each paid £2,000 to party alongside some of the world’s most sensational artefacts and a roll call of bigwigs from the worlds of fashion, art and culture: Naomi Campbell and Alexa Chung, Miuccia Prada and Manolo Blahnik, Sir Steve McQueen and Sir Grayson Perry and Dame Kristin Scott Thomas.As well as glitz, however, there will be brass

4 days ago
A picture

My cultural awakening: ‘The Specials helped me to stop fixating on death’

My anxious disposition means I think about death a lot. But a cluster of people I loved dying in 2023, and most of them unexpectedly and within a few months of each other, was enough to shake my nervous system up pretty significantly. Five funerals is too many. The first was my nan: she was the family matriarch. The oldest person in the family, so there was a level of acceptance among the sadness

4 days ago
A picture

From After the Hunt to the Last Dinner Party: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

After the HuntOut nowJulia Roberts stars in the latest from Challengers director Luca Guadagnino: a cancel-culture thriller set in the aftermath of an accusation of sexual assault on a college campus. She plays a philosophy professor at Yale, whose colleague Hank (Andrew Garfield) claims he is innocent of the charges against him.FrankensteinOut nowYears in the making, decades in the dreaming, Guillermo del Toro’s splendidly visceral take on one of literature’s true greats, starring Oscar Isaac as the eponymous scientist and an unrecognisable Jacob Elordi, asthe Creature, is long and messy and brilliant. It deserves to be seen on the big screen (though a Netflix release is following hot on the heels of this cinema release if you do miss it).SunlightOut nowComedian Nina Conti makes her directing debut with a deliciously dark road trip comedy that isn’t for the faint of heart

4 days ago
A picture

The Guide #213: Should we mourn the demise of TV channels?

For seasoned tea-leaf readers of the future of TV in the UK, two stories will have stood out this week, swirling around at the bottom of their cups. There was the news that MTV is shutting down its music channels – sad for those of us who misspent their youth watching them, though hardly surprising either, given MTV’s decades-long shift away from music and towards rolling repeats of Teen Mom and shows about tattooists. And there was a media piece in the Guardian about the demise of British TV’s once-gold plated 9pm slot, which for the first time last month failed to achieve a rating of 1m or more among any of the major broadcasters.That second story was a little surprising. Overnight viewing figures are in constant decline in the streaming age, but even by those standards, not one solitary rating over 1m is eye-catching

5 days ago
recentSee all
A picture

Water firms in England could face harsher sewage fines under new Environment Agency powers

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Gold on track for biggest one-day fall since 2020; BoE governor warns over private credit risks - as it happened

about 14 hours ago
A picture

ChatGPT Atlas: OpenAI launches web browser centered around its chatbot

about 11 hours ago
A picture

‘Significant exposure’: Amazon Web Services outage exposed UK state’s £1.7bn reliance on tech giant

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Jets owner outlines hopes for team: ‘If we can complete a pass, it would look good’

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Amy Jones and England cannot avoid Ashes’ shadow over Australia rematch

about 11 hours ago