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

Destanee Aiava calls out ‘racist’ tennis culture in explosive retirement post

about 19 hours ago
A picture


Australia’s Destanee Aiava has announced her plans to retire from professional tennis in a scathing and expletive-laden statement on social media.The 25-year-old hit out at a tennis culture she said was “racist, misogynistic, homophobic and hostile to anyone who doesn’t fit the mould”, as she revealed plans to call time on her playing career at the end of 2026.Aiava questioned whether the sport was worth the sacrifice and added that “tennis was my toxic boyfriend” in a wide-ranging and explosive Instagram post.“Life is not meant to be lived in misery and half assed,” Aiava said in the statement.“My ultimate goal is to be able to wake up every day and genuinely say that I love what I do – which I think everyone deserves a chance at.

“I’m 25, turning 26 this year and I feel so far behind everyone else, like I’m starting from scratch.I’m also scared.But that’s better than living a life that’s misaligned, or being around constant comparison and losing yourself.”The former junior prodigy saved her most explosive assessment for critics and online trolls who have targeted her over the years for her results, appearance and the bright outfits that she wears.“I want to say a ginormous fuck you to everyone in the tennis community who’s ever made me feel less than,” she said.

“Fuck you to every single gambler who’s sent me hate or death threats.“Fuck you to the people who sit behind screens on social media, commenting on my body, my career, or whatever the fuck they want to nitpick.And fuck you to a sport that hides behind so-called class and gentlemanly values.“Behind the white outfits and traditions is a culture that’s racist, misogynistic, homophobic and hostile to anyone who doesn’t fit the mould.”This article includes content provided by Instagram.

We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies.To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.As a child, Aiava was inspired to play tennis while watching Serena Williams at the Australian Open.After bursting on to the scene as a teenager she climbed to a career-high singles ranking of 147 in 2017, but has failed to consistently hit those same heights and currently sits at world No 321.Melbourne-born Aiava reached the second round of the Australian Open for the first time in 2025 but did not qualify for the women’s singles draw at this year’s home grand slam.

She was eliminated with partner Maddison Inglis in the first round of the women’s doubles at Melbourne Park in January and has not stepped on to the court for a competitive match since then.Aiava recalled her “first lesson at Casey Tennis Club” in her retirement post before turning attention to a career that appeared to be full of promise after she reached the singles third round at Wimbledon as a 17-year-old in 2017.“I often wondered what my life would have looked like if I’d chosen anything else and whether everything I sacrificed for this sport was actually worth the cost,” she said.“There was a time in my career when I had reached the point that comes just before you make your big breakthrough, when the world is at your feet and nothing can touch you.“I was only 17, unprepared and dangerously naive to the consequences of trusting the wrong people.

The trajectory of my career was never the same after that.”Aiava left the door open to what her 2026 tennis season might look like, as well as the next phase of her life beyond, saying that it will be “one led by purpose, creativity and passion”.
foodSee all
A picture

How to plan Ramadan meals: minimal work, maximum readiness

Ramadan arrives this year in February, in the heart of winter. Short days, cold evenings and the pressure of everyday work mean that preparation is no longer about producing abundance, but about reducing effort while maintaining care. For many households balancing jobs, children and long commutes, the question is not what to cook, but how to make the month manageable.The most effective approach to Ramadan cooking is not variety but repetition. A small set of meals that are easy to digest, quick to prepare and gentle on the body can carry a household through 30 days of fasting with far less stress than daily reinvention

3 days ago
A picture

Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for almond frangipane crepes | The sweet spot

When it comes to pancake day, I don’t discriminate and fill the day with as many types of pancakes as possible – from a fluffy American-style stack in the morning to a savoury buckwheat pancake at lunch, and finishing off with classic crepes in the evening. This version was heavily inspired by an almond croissant, so although it does lean more towards dessert, I won’t judge if this is what you choose to start your day with. Bake them until the edges go crisp but the middle stays a little gooey.Prep 5 min Rest 20+ min Cook 50 min Makes 7-8 crepes120g plain flour ½ tbsp caster sugar A pinch of salt 2 large eggs 240ml whole milk 25g melted butter, plus extra for greasing Icing sugar, for dusting Lightly whipped cream, to serve (optional)For the frangipane90g salted butter, softened90g caster sugar ¼-½ tsp almond extract1 large egg 110g ground almonds 50g flaked almondsPut the flour, sugar and salt in a bowl and whisk briefly to combine. Add the eggs, whisk to a thick paste, then pour in the milk in three batches, whisking each time to avoid any lumps

3 days ago
A picture

Heard it on the grapevine: Polish wine’s quiet renaissance

Swap the staid stereotypes of Żubrówka vodka and Żywiec lager for vineyards and vintages, because Poland is in the throes of a viticultural renaissance, the likes of which hasn’t been seen for centuries. On a road trip tracing Poland’s best terroirs back in the summer of 2023, I met winemakers going against the grain, unshackled by tradition and producing unpretentious, expressive pours that more than merit a place on your dining table.Lately, Polish wines have been cropping up all over bar and restaurant lists: Niemczańska’s chardonnay at London’s most emblematic Polish restaurant, the borscht-fronted Daquise in South Kensington, say, while chic bar Spry in Edinburgh has started stocking my favourite producers, Dom Bliskowice, Kamil Barczentewicz and Nizio. But you won’t find bottles nestling between the neat rows of kabanos sausages of your local Polski sklep, nor lining the supermarket shelves. Or not just yet, anyway

3 days ago
A picture

​My love letter to Brittany’s best exports

Every February – or occasionally March – I get together with two friends to gorge on pancakes; I provide the pan, Caro does the cocktails and poor old Harry is invariably the chef because she never fails, even three ciders in. With two half-Frenchies in the room, we always start with buckwheat galettes, usually served complète with gruyère, ham and a fried egg (though the more we eat, the more adventurous the combinations become). Then we move on to softer, thicker British sweet pancakes with lemon juice and crunchy demerara sugar to finish. We rarely manage to meet on Shrove Tuesday itself, but apart from the year I went vegan for Lent, that’s no problem. After all, any cold, dark evening is improved by a pancake party

3 days ago
A picture

Rachel Roddy’s recipe for cacio e pepe, the old-fashioned way | A kitchen in Rome

Nightclubs, mechanics, restaurants, a theatre, a wholesale butcher and an Apostolic church occupy some of the network of caves and tunnels that, over the centuries, were burrowed into Monte Testaccio, an ancient rubbish dump hill in the middle of Rome that’s made entirely of broken amphorae. Some places make a feature of their situation, revealing sections of pots not dissimilar to the cross section of snapped wafer biscuits, while others have smoothed the curves with plaster.A few use the caves as originally intended – that is, as natural warehouses offering steady low temperatures and good humidity. In short: the ideal temperature for storing certain foods and wine. Most recently, Vincenzo Mancini, whose project DOL distributes artisanal products from small agricultural realities in Lazio, has taken over a deep cave behind door 93, reclaiming it as an urban ageing space for cheese and cured meat

4 days ago
A picture

How to use up leftover pickle brine in a tartare sauce – recipe | Waste not

Depending on country, region, household or restaurant, every cook makes tartare sauce in their own way. Inspired by Auguste Escoffier’s exceptionally simple tartare, I’ve given his recipe a zero-waste twist by using whole boiled eggs and swapping in pickle brine from a jar of gherkins or capers to replace the vinegar. Everything else is optional: tarragon, mustard, cayenne … add what you like or have in store.Traditionally, tartare sauce is delicious with fish and chips, calamari or in a chicken sandwich, but I also like it tossed through potato salad with tinned sardines and radicchio. It’s also great as a dip with crudites and on top of a steaming jacket potato

4 days ago
businessSee all
A picture

BrewDog could be broken up as craft beer business put up for sale

1 day ago
A picture

Did you buy a coffee machine with a tax refund? It may have affected Australia’s interest rate

1 day ago
A picture

Reeves appoints higher pay advocate to fight skills shortages as chief economic adviser

2 days ago
A picture

Trump ‘plans to roll back’ some metal tariffs; US inflation weaker than expected in January - business live

2 days ago
A picture

Penalty notice: Euro Car Parks fined £473,000 for ignoring regulator

2 days ago
A picture

US inflation falls to 2.4% in January after Trump’s tariffs led to price fluctuations

2 days ago