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

Confused England not helping Jacob Bethell to flourish on bewildering Ashes tour | Mark Ramprakash

about 12 hours ago
A picture


There used to be a saying in county cricket: a quick game’s a good game,You’d hear it from the old pros who sensed a poor wicket or a downpour, because it meant they would get more time off,Well, England and Australia have certainly adhered to that saying,There’s another one you hear a lot in cricket these days: there’s a ball with your name on it,It frees batters up, takes the pressure off, and allows them to run down the wicket, to play scoops and ramps, in the belief that they have to be proactive because there’s a good ball round the corner.

Modern batters don’t want to trust their defence and, if the world’s best players have that mindset – you hear it a lot from this England setup – you’re going to get a lot of unnecessary dismissals, leading to accelerated matches,That’s what we saw in the fourth Test, exacerbated by an unsatisfactory pitch,In Perth at the start of the series England blew a match-winning position to lose the game inside two days, and in Melbourne it was Australia’s turn,Brendon McCullum likes to talk about running towards the danger, and at the MCG his team flew towards it,As the game ended I was really not sure what I had just witnessed – how much had they improved on their previous performances, and how much had Australia allowed complacency to creep in with the series won?Either way, I was reminded of a few Ashes series that I had been involved in, in which England ended up in the kind of position they found themselves after three games of this one, with the urn lost but pride still to play for.

I can tell you we were all scrapping for our lives and I was pleased to see a side full of determination and competitive spirit and delighted that they were rewarded with a victory,But there were some disappointments along the way,In particular I was frustrated to see Jacob Bethell thrown in at No 3,Obviously my opinions have been shaped by my own experiences and in my career I was elevated up the order when I was very young – but there was a method to it,I had opened in school cricket and at second XI level, but there was no way they were going to throw me into the first team at the top of the order so they put me in initially at No 6, and gave me a chance to adjust to the standard I was dealing with.

They did everything they could to help me succeed and find my feet, and I feel England have done the opposite with Bethell,He’s very highly rated, plays quick bowlers well and has a good temperament, but he is also young and inexperienced,As he walked out 15 balls into England’s first innings, it felt like a really tough ask,People will counter that Test cricket is tough, and you have to grab your opportunities whenever they come along,But if the selectors have faith in a young player they should be doing everything they can to help them succeed, and though Bethell may well thrive at No 3 it will be in spite of not because of them.

In that second innings, as England chased down a small total, we saw the best of Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett as an opening partnership, enjoying the clarity that comes with having a target to chase and being told to set the tone,Bethell came in (at No 4 due to Brydon Carse’s surprise elevation) and looked assured, with a good range of shots, and seems calm at the crease – a contrast with some of his predecessors at No 3 – which on a wicket like that is not easy,But the greatest bonus from that game was Josh Tongue,He looks to be the big success story of the talent ID system under Rob Key,He just does the basics brilliantly well: a simple run-up then delivering the ball from a high release point just past the perpendicular, which makes it really hard for a right-hander to line him up.

Brydon Carse deserves credit for coming back after the punishment he’s taken in this series, when he’s bowled all over the place and gone round the park, and for rediscovering what a good length is, the length where the batter is thinking about coming forward but the ball is full enough to threaten the top of the stumps.Especially with Gus Atkinson getting injured, those were big positives for England.It looks like Matt Potts will come in for the last game, a player with a reputation as a very hard worker, very fit, conscientious about his cricket.But his lack of match practice makes an already difficult ask even harder.Let’s hope he can learn from watching Pat Cummins in Adelaide, returning after a lengthy period of not bowling in matches and hitting his straps very quickly.

If I were David Saker, England’s bowling coach, I would be wanting to know what Australia did to help Cummins bounce back with no match practice – though obviously their captain is a proven world-class performer with a massive resource of experience to draw on.Hopefully Potts can be relied upon to run in and bowl that fuller, top-of-the-stumps length.After winning in Melbourne, Ben Stokes referred to the brilliant job the management, coaches and support staff had done to help the team shake off the narrative around their trip to Noosa and concentrate on cricket.Well, we can admire that to a degree, but it’s tinged with the knowledge that this was a situation of their own making.There’s no one else to blame here.

The players were told, in the middle of the biggest series of their lives, to let their hair down and enjoy a lads’ trip by the sea, and the negative headlines that followed were in effect written by England’s coaches and management.The whole thing was very hard to comprehend.So great, England won at the MCG despite a lot of bad press, but it was a mess entirely of their own making.And so we move to Sydney, and a chance to end this often bewildering and disappointing tour on a high.The destiny of the urn has been decided, but when it comes to the future of this England setup and those responsible for it, it’s all to play for.

cultureSee all
A picture

‘An Arab in a post-9/11 world’: Khalid Abdalla’s one-man play about belonging comes to Australia

When British-Egyptian actor Khalid Abdalla farewelled the hit series The Crown and his character, Dodi Fayed, he knew he was saying goodbye to a role with a depth and significance well beyond merely a love interest for Princess Diana.“Dodi is one of the first Arab characters I can think of in the history of [western] film that you get to know and love, not fear,” says Abdalla, seated in his London home two years after the series ended. “And so, when he dies, you mourn him.”Glasgow-born Abdalla, 45, whose father and grandfather were leftist political dissidents in Egypt, well understood the cultural significance of fleshing out the character of Alexandria-born Fayed beyond the playboy of legend.He was also acutely aware of the political moment in which his portrayal was being presented

4 days ago
A picture

Tension on the streets, the mushroom trial circus and a devastating terrorist attack – looking back on Australia’s turbulent 2025

Fires, floods, murders, a missing child and a massacre – 2025 in Australia brought some of the very worst news.Threaded through the year were themes that persisted from 2024 and will carry on into 2026 – the cost of living, interest rates, immigration debates, the housing crisis, global instability, AI and Aukus.And, of course, the effects of the climate crisis, the battle against it, and the battle against the battle against it.But the year also brought twisty tales, uniquely Australian moments and events that will change the nation for ever.A range of charges were brought under the Australian federal police’s special operation Avalite, targeting antisemitic behaviour

4 days ago
A picture

The best films of 2025 … you may not have seen

There’s something almost self-fulfilling about Endless Cookie being an overlooked gem. The crudely animated Canadian documentary, directed by two half-brothers occupying separate worlds between Toronto and Shamattawa First Nation, lives in and finds its voice in the ellipses between typical narrative beats. A fart, a toilet flush, mumbling asides and the squabble of children sharing the same room as Seth Scriver (who is white) he interviews his Indigenous brother Pete are among the overlooked moments that are usually left on a cutting-room floor. But they resonate in Endless Cookie, like life refusing to be silenced in a surrealist self-portraiture that delights in colouring outside the lines. Institutional violence and neglect, intergenerational trauma and over-policing in Indigenous communities are all visible, but often kept at bay

5 days ago
A picture

‘I once Bogarted a joint from a Beatle’: Stewart Copeland of the Police

Your 2025 album, Wild Concerto, stars birds and animals as soloists; what animal do you think best represents you, and why?The wolves of the Arctic Circle! Actually, no, no, no – the hyenas of the Skeleton Coast. Hyenas are very cool animals: they’re butt ugly, but they have extremely complex society, they’re very complex vocally, and they’re very strange animals. I don’t know whether I identify with them personally or not. OK, fuck that: let’s go back to the wolf, much more heroic.You’ve been touring your in-conversation show – what is the most common question you get from audiences?Someone always asks me about Spyro [1998 platformer Spyro The Dragon]

6 days ago
A picture

From Central Cee to Adolescence: in 2025 British culture had a global moment – but can it last?

Despite funding cuts and shuttered venues, homegrown music, TV, film and, yes, memes have dominated the global zeitgeist over the past 12 years. Now this culture must be future-proofed from the forces of globalisationOn the face of it, British culture looks doomed. Our music industry is now borderline untenable, with grassroots venues shuttering at speed (125 in 2023 alone) and artists unable to afford to play the few that are left; touring has become a loss leader that even established acts must subsidise with other work. Meanwhile, streaming has gutted the value of recorded music, leading to industry contraction at the highest level: earlier this year the UK divisions of Warners and Atlantic – two of our biggest record labels – were effectively subsumed into the US business.In comedy, the Edinburgh fringe – the crucible of modern British standup, sketch and sitcom – is in existential crisis thanks to a dearth of sponsorship and prohibitively high costs for performers

6 days ago
A picture

The best songs of 2025 … you may not have heard

There is a sense of deep knowing and calm to Not Offended, the lone song released this year by the Danish-Montenegrin musician (also an earlier graduate of the Copenhagen music school currently producing every interesting alternative pop star). To warmly droning organ that hangs like the last streak of sunlight above a darkening horizon, Milovic assures someone that they haven’t offended her – but her steady Teutonic tenderness, reminiscent of Molly Nilsson or Sophia Kennedy, suggests that their actions weren’t provocative so much as evasive. Strings flutter tentatively as she addresses this person who can’t look life in the eye right now. “I see you clearly,” Milovic sings, as the drums kick in and the strings become full-blooded: a reminder of the ease that letting go can offer. Laura SnapesIn a year that saw the troubling rise of AI-generated slop music, there is something endlessly comforting about a song that can only have been written by a messy, complicated human

6 days ago
societySee all
A picture

High blood pressure: who is at risk and why UK children are getting it

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Call for routine high blood pressure testing of UK children as cases almost double

about 19 hours ago
A picture

UK ministers face increased pressure to restrict gambling ads

about 23 hours ago
A picture

Hundreds of Blackpool families to be evicted in ‘mass dispersion’ of vulnerable people

1 day ago
A picture

Ethnic minorities in England less likely to have access to diabetes tech – study

1 day ago
A picture

Children in England to be offered vaccines in their own homes

1 day ago