H
trending
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

Australian Open is drawing record crowds before the tournament has even begun

about 10 hours ago
A picture


“Cricket’s in December,” Tennis Australia’s chief executive, Craig Tiley, says with a smile on a record-breaking first day of the Australian Open on Monday.The veteran may be rumoured to be considering a move to the US Tennis Association, but for now he remains focused on his sport’s summer dominance.“Our objective is we want to own January,” he says.At the launch of one of many Melbourne Park sponsor activations, conditions are ripe for Tiley to talk a big game.“We’re intense, and we’re intense because we’re 21 days, every day.

”The Australian Open was previously a two-week tennis event,It expanded to 15 days in 2024 by bringing forward the start of the main draw by 24 hours,Now Tennis Australia wants to make the most of “Opening Week”, which has traditionally been the domain of the fading prospects and veterans still dreaming of a great grand slam run by going through qualifying,Until 2024, it was free to attend these qualifying matches,Now, ground passes are A$20 (£10) a day, a price that is slowly closing the gap to the A$65 (£32) it costs to attend during the main draw.

Aided by a “kids go free” promotion, the tournament drew a first-day record crowd of 29,261 on Monday – almost four times last year’s number – even though the leading name on the schedule was Bernard Tomic.The sun was shining and, inside, vendors were busy, even if drinks and food are not cheap (A$6.50 for 600ml soft drink, A$15.60 for 425ml of Balter XPA; A$18.90 for a small pizza, A$14 for chicken tenders).

“It doesn’t feel like it’s the first day of qualifiers, it feels in many ways like it’s the first day of the event,” Tiley says.“But this is the first day of 21 days of activity, entertainment, sport.”The week is now supercharged by charity exhibitions with top players, music concerts – a show by dance veterans Hot Chip on Tuesday night is sold out and The Presets are playing on Friday – and promotions like the One Point Slam and Saturday’s new opening ceremony, featuring Roger Federer.Last year Tennis Australia’s annual revenue jumped by A$102m to A$693m (£50.7m to £345m).

Tiley is adamant his philosophy is not growth for growth’s sake.“We are an event about getting people to pick up a racket and play, and we’re always going to be about promoting the game and providing opportunities for players,” he says.“There’s more things we can do, we have live music for the whole time, everything is open, more food, more gaming, a partnership with Mecca on beauty and wellness.”The efforts appear to be working.In 2024, opening week attracted almost 90,000 fans.

More than 116,000 came last year,Tiley expects that number to double or triple this year, and wants to see it quickly rise to half a million,The ace up his sleeve is the One Point Slam, a promotion that pits top professionals against celebrities and amateurs who have won through regional qualifiers,It was trialled last year but this summer a A$1m (£500,000) prize has been added,“We’ve had quite a few international organisations approach us about how we’re approaching it, because they see it as a great opportunity as connecting community tennis to professional tennis,” Tiley says.

Wednesday night’s event will feature Carlos Alcaraz and Nick Kyrgios as well as the former cricketer Steve Waugh, the TV presenter Karl Stefanovic and the comedian Andy Lee – and is now a A$29 (£14) ticketed event.Alan Preston was at Melbourne Park on Monday with his family who hail from Cobh in Ireland.They are keen tennis players and have attended Wimbledon.Australia’s grand slam, Preston says after his first three hours, was “a million miles better, and it’s not just about the weather.“Everything is signed well here, it’s mapped out.

We’ve got all the memorabilia, and to see the top-grade players warming up and training this morning in Rod Laver Arena was impressive as well,”Tiley is aware that the experience of fans can be tested when the site is too full, or when temperatures rise,Melbourne Park this year includes larger shaded areas, and amenities remain a focus,“The objective is to bring the players and the fans closer together,” he says, highlighting how outside courts now have two-level grandstands,“We’re connecting that second level to other second levels, and the future plan we have with that side of the precinct is to sink the courts into the ground even further and raise the stands on the side and be able to walk around the top.

”That would be an expensive upgrade for Melbourne Park five years after it completed a A$1bn (£497m) redevelopment, and it would need support from the Victorian government and the trust that controls the precinct.“The priority is to keep growing the event,” Tiley says.“The sink courts idea I gave, that’s just an idea, but generally when we throw out ideas out there, they sort of become reality, we want people to think about them that way.”
foodSee all
A picture

Helen Goh’s recipe for baked apples with lemon and tahini | The sweet spot

After the excesses of December, these baked apples are a light, refreshing vegan pudding. The filling makes good use of any dried fruit lingering still from Christmas, and is brightened with lemon and bound with nutty tahini. As the apples bake, they turn yielding and fragrant, while the sesame oat topping crisps to a golden crown. Serve warm with a splash of cream, yoghurt or ice-cream (dairy or otherwise), and you have comfort that feels wholesome and indulgent.If need be, you can make these vegan and/or dairy-free with a few simple tweaks

4 days ago
A picture

Health by stealth: the rise of drinkable no- and low-alcohol beer

As the last of the liqueur bottles are consigned to the recycling and the festive hangovers subside, even those of us who scorn the very concept of Dry January (no booze at all? In the gloomiest month of the year? Are they mad?) tend to take our feet off the alcohol pedal and give our livers something of a rest.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.Water, of course, is the easiest, cheapest and probably most effective way to detox; it’s also the most boring

4 days ago
A picture

Mark Hix’s recipe for roast pumpkin and pickled walnut salad

I try to grow a few varieties of squash every season, but in the past couple of years the results have more or less failed me. I originally put that down to the lack of time and attention I’d given those poor plants, but I’m now starting to wonder if the soil in my raised garden beds overlooking Lyme Bay in Dorset is actually right for them.I’m not giving up just yet, though, and this year I’ll be trying different varieties in a different bed that I’ve prepared and composted over the winter with seaweed mulch. As luck would have it, however, my friend Rob Corbett came to the rescue a couple of weeks ago by giving me several specimens when he delivered some wine from his Castlewood vineyard a few miles away in east Devon. If you know your gourds even a little, you will also know that squashes keep for months, which is handy, because they ideally need to cure and ripen before use

5 days ago
A picture

Premium peaches and luscious lychees: Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for January

Apricots are here for a good time, not a long time. “We’re eating some really good Victorian ones at the moment, then towards the end of this month we’ll get into the Tasmanian ones,” says Graham Gee, senior buyer at the Happy Apple in Melbourne.He’s selling them for $5 to $8 a kilo, depending on variety; his favourite is the Moorpark apricot. “They’re not the most beautiful to look at,” he says. “But the flavour is so rich

5 days ago
A picture

How to turn excess hard veg into fridge-raid sauerkraut – recipe | Waste not

The dry-salting fermentation method used to make sauerkraut works brilliantly on almost any firm vegetable, so you can happily explore beyond the traditional cabbage. I had a couple of carrots and a piece of squash that needed saving, so I turned them into a golden kraut with ginger, turmeric and a little orange zest for brightness. Use whatever you have to hand and let the ingredients lead your creativity.Fermenting is an enjoyable way to make the most of a seasonal ingredient or to use up surplus produce. At our restaurant, whenever we had a glut that needed using up, we used to rely on fermentation, because not only did it saves us money in the long term, it also helped us to create imaginative, delicious new products to cook with

5 days ago
A picture

Hurrah for veganism and Victorian sewers | Letters

As a vegan of nearly 40 years, I agree with much of what Dean Weston says about animal welfare (Letters, 30 December). But as a former civil engineer, I cannot overlook the massive category mistakes in his assertion that the government’s animal welfare strategy “treats animal suffering the way Victorian engineers treated cholera. Add a valve here, a filter there, and never question the sewer itself.”Victorian engineers did not “treat” cholera, but were arguably more effective than the medical profession in dealing with the disease. They reduced the prevalence of cholera precisely by constructing adequate sanitation

6 days ago
politicsSee all
A picture

Slashing jury trials could clear courts backlog within a decade, says Lammy

1 day ago
A picture

Senior Labour MPs urge government to ban cryptocurrency political donations

1 day ago
A picture

Mandelson praises Trump’s ‘graciousness’ and declines to apologise for friendship with Jeffrey Epstein – as it happened

1 day ago
A picture

UK wants any transition of power in Iran to be peaceful, says minister

1 day ago
A picture

Sir Patrick Duffy obituary

3 days ago
A picture

Zarah Sultana’s Your Party membership launch may be ‘criminal’ matter for police, ICO says

3 days ago