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

Fans and Welsh rugby chiefs at odds over plan to cut one of four professional sides

about 15 hours ago
A picture


Richard Collier-Keywood, the embattled chair of the Welsh Rugby Union, has insisted he has the support of fans and players in Wales as the WRU attempts to drive through radical plans to cut one of the four professional sides.Giving evidence before the House of Commons Welsh affairs select committee, Collier-Keywood – who is facing the threat of a vote of no confidence in his leadership – said he believed “the rugby system was essentially broken” in Wales before he took over and there was widespread acknowledgment that it needed to change.His evidence came on a day when a quartet of Welsh fan representatives testified before that same select committee that he was wrong.Iwan Griffiths, from the Scarlets Supporters Trust, said a poll of their members had revealed that 90% were against the WRU’s proposals.Daniel Hallett, from the Dragons Supporters’ Club, said their own survey had shown “there is no appetite for a potential merger, there is no appetite for jumping ship to another team who have been historic rivals”.

“We recognise change is painful and we went into this understanding that this would be very painful for groups of supporters,” Collier-Keywood said.“But unfortunately the rugby system was broken, the pathways were broken, and we have announced an investment plan of £28m over five years to fix that problem.”The plan proposes scrapping the Ospreys, given the region’s owners are the WRU’s preferred bidder for Cardiff, which the union has owned since the club went into administration.Collier-Keywood and the WRU chief executive, Abi Tierney, believed the situation they had inherited was unsustainable because the WRU was in special financial measures.That meant the most pressing issue they faced was the need to refinance the WRU’s debts.

The France head coach, Fabian Galthié, has dropped the experienced trio Gaël Fickou, Gregory Alldritt and Les Bleus’ all-time record try-scorer Damian Penaud from his 42-man squad for the start of the Six Nations,All three players will miss France’s Six Nations opener at home against Ireland next month but could be called up later in the tournament,The fly-half Romain Ntamack is also missing through injury but Dupont will make his first France appearance since tearing his cruciate knee ligament in March,For Ireland, Hugo Keenan, who has not played since the British & Irish Lions tour last year, has been named in Andy Farrell’s Six Nations squad,Meanwhile, the former England captain Jamie George is to retire at the end of 2027 after agreeing a one-year contract extension with Saracens.

AFP and Guardian sportTo do so, they needed to negotiate a new Professional Rugby Agreement, but the process had stalled because two regions, Scarlets and Ospreys, wanted more assurances over how the WRU planned to finance Cardiff.“We were going to fail,” Tierney said.“Sometimes one of the issues you face in leadership is that keeping going along the same path isn’t the right thing to do.”Collier-Keywood argued that Welsh rugby is “starved of resources”, with the four teams subsisting on operational budgets that are only around half the size of some of their rivals in other countries.Cutting one of the four regions is “the affordable way forward, and it is also the way forward that will allow our rugby to improve”, he claimed.

“When we sat down as a board and looked at the rugby players we had in the system who were Welsh, we didn’t feel we had enough for four teams,”The existing four had been employing “around 30 non-Welsh players”, which he described as “frankly a waste of money in the longer term”,Tierney also denied that the WRU was facing any real threat of an Extraordinary General Meeting, even after Central Glamorgan Rugby Union recently wrote to clubs asking for their support holding a vote of no confidence in Collier-Keywood,“We haven’t received anything from the community clubs,” Tierney said, “and we haven’t yet had any call for an EGM,”Central Glamorgan would need the support of around 30 of the 300 clubs in Wales to force an EGM.

politicsSee all
A picture

Gwyn Jones obituary

My friend Gwyn Jones, who has died aged 75, lived and breathed revolutionary politics, and was always restless for change.Any news of an uprising somewhere in the world sent him into raptures, and he would be itching to become involved in any way he could. He went to live in Spain in the mid-1970s after the end of the Franco regime, supporting socialist causes there, and spent a number of years in post-Soviet Romania and Hungary on a similar mission.Though his efforts were often unsuccessful, he developed around him a small band of people who felt the same way that he did. He was a sweet man and a flawed genius, but definitely a genius: he could gain complete mastery of any topic he chose to delve into, and his understanding of history and Marxism was a wonder to behold

about 16 hours ago
A picture

People in Newark: share your views on Robert Jenrick defecting to Reform UK

After months of denials, Robert Jenrick finally defected to Reform UK last week.Nigel Farage called it the “latest Christmas present I’ve ever had”, while Conservative MPs called him a “coward” and a “traitor”.In Jenrick’s Newark constituency, his former Tory colleagues were aghast. Sam Smith, a local councillor, said the defection was “a betrayal to the voters of Newark”, who voted for conservative policies and values as well as “a betrayal to his friends who have helped him get re-elected.” But what do Jenrick’s constituents make of Jenrick’s defection?We would like to speak to people who live in Newark about what they think

about 20 hours ago
A picture

Keir Starmer to visit China with British business leaders next week, say reports

Keir Starmer will reportedly visit China next week after controversial plans for Beijing to build a vast embassy in London were approved by his government.The UK prime minster will lead a delegation of blue-chip British companies, according to Reuters. The same firms, which include BP, HSBC, Intercontinental Hotels Group, Jaguar Land Rover and Rolls-Royce were also said to be among those who will join a revamped “UK-China CEO council”.There was no comment from Downing Street early on Wednesday. However, Jonathan Powell, the national security adviser, went to Beijing in November for talks with China’s top diplomat, Wang Yi, before an anticipated trip by Starmer

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Starmer should resist calls to match Trump ‘tweet-for-tweet’, says Miliband

Britain would be in a “much worse” position if Keir Starmer had done what others were calling on him to do by matching Donald Trump “tweet-for-tweet”, a UK cabinet minister has said.Defending the prime minister’s handling of the deepening diplomatic crisis over Greenland and the US president’s threat of levying tariffs on the UK and other Nato allies, the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, declined to say if Britain would respond in kind.Speaking before Trump’s arrival at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Miliband, a former Labour leader, also told the BBC that Starmer was not travelling to the summit because there were “all kinds of other things that he’s doing”.“The bigger picture here is that the prime minister is, I think, navigating a really difficult international situation with great skill and in our national interest,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.“I know some people will want to say: ‘Why hasn’t the prime minister been matching Donald Trump tweet-for-tweet?’ All of that

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Nigel Farage apologises for 17 breaches of MPs’ code of conduct

Nigel Farage has apologised for 17 breaches of the MPs’ code of conduct after failing to declare £380,000 of income on time, saying he is an “oddball” who does not do computers.The Reform UK leader and MP for Clacton said he had relied on a senior member of staff to submit his income to the register of interests and had been let down, but he took full responsibility for the error.He blamed “severe growing pains” as Reform UK had been overwhelmed by administration and emails since growing in size and gaining MPs at the 2024 election. The interests included his work as a broadcaster for GB News and payments for social media output on Google and X.Farage, who is the highest-earning MP, has previously admitted breaching parliamentary rules by failing to register a trip to Florida to appear at a fundraising event for Donald Trump

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Love, actually? Starmer’s ‘keep calm’ approach to Trump comes under strain

In his account of Tony Blair’s years in power, The New Machiavelli, Jonathan Powell sets out two opposing strategies for any British prime minister in dealing with their counterpart in the White House.The first, he says, is “cutting a bella figura” – parading for show – by openly criticising the US president, for which he gives the example of the French. The other, and the approach preferred by Powell, is to do diplomacy in private and build a close relationship, in the hope of having greater influence.These days, Powell is Keir Starmer’s national security adviser and his closest, most influential lieutenant on world affairs. That his prescription for the UK’s strategy towards Donald Trump is so close to the prime minister’s natural instincts goes some way to explaining that

1 day ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Seth Meyers on Trump: ‘It shouldn’t be this hard to make sense of what the president says and does’

2 days ago
A picture

Mama Does Derby review – Virginia Gay’s Town Hall takeover is ambitious, entertaining and irresistibly warm

3 days ago
A picture

The Guide #226: SPOILER ALERT! It’s never been easier to avoid having your favourite show ruined

5 days ago
A picture

My cultural awakening: an Eddie Izzard routine inspired me to learn French – and get a job with the EU

5 days ago
A picture

Hijack to Robbie Williams: the week in rave reviews

5 days ago
A picture

From 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple to A$AP Rocky: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

5 days ago