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

Cameron Young holds off Matt Fitzpatrick on final hole to win Players Championship

about 7 hours ago
A picture


The PGA Tour might have lost out in the court of public opinion over whether the Players Championship could be a major,However, the level of drama as shadows lengthened on this Sawgrass Sunday set the tournament aside from most others,It came down to Cameron Young versus Matt Fitzpatrick,As Fitzpatrick agonisingly missed for par on the 72nd hole, Young had secured the biggest win of his career,He had emerged triumphant from a sporting thriller.

Fitzpatrick will rue the 18th hole.He had taken a double bogey there on Saturday.As his tee shot in round four sprayed right and into pine straw, the Yorkshireman was in trouble again.Young had battered his drive 375 yards down the fairway.It was an advantage the New Yorker was unwilling to waste.

Fitzpatrick will take little consolation from the fact he was in the depths of despair when missing the Players cut in 2025.A year on the Englishman was part of another painful scenario.The only point in which Young led this tournament was the final hole on the final day.Talk about impeccable timing.“The nerves kicked in over an eight-inch putt on the last,” Young admitted.

“The hole looked really small at that point,” Not so at the iconic 17th, which Young birdied three days in a row,Fitzpatrick shrugged off American crowd support for Young, having been part of the European Ryder Cup team who were heckled at Bethpage last year,“That was literally child’s play compared to Bethpage,” Fitzpatrick said,“If they think that that was anything, then they need to reassess.

Get yourself up to New York.“That’s how it is.It probably wouldn’t be the same because we’re a little bit more polite in Europe, I would say, but I would hope it would be of similar intensity in Europe.I knew it was coming.I had it with Jordan Spieth in 2023.

It’s funny to me.I find it hilarious.”Ludvig Åberg’s lead, three shots at the start of play, looked perfectly solid until the Swede found water on the 11th and 12th.Åberg collapsed to a dismal 76, including a back nine of 40.It may take some time for Åberg to recover from this.

On three successive PGA Tour Sundays, there has been late trauma for golfers apparently close to victory,With wind whipping, Sawgrass was especially fiendish,As Åberg stumbled, it was Fitzpatrick who initially forged into the lead,His trouble was Young played the treacherous final six holes in two under,Robert MacIntyre was also a key part of the equation before finding water with his third shot at the 16th.

Fourth place was still a fine return for the Scot,Xander Schauffele birdied the last to take third, two shots shy of Young’s 13 under par,Rory McIlroy’s even par aggregate was sufficient for a place just inside the top 50,McIlroy is still to decide whether to play again before his Masters defence gets under way at Augusta National in early April,“I’ll see how my body feels,” McIlroy said.

“We’ll see how I feel in practice and at home,If I get itchy feet at home maybe I will add an event,”
politicsSee all
A picture

Row over tuition fees cut for European students threatens Starmer’s EU reset

Britain is in a standoff with Brussels over a demand to cut university tuition fees for European students, in a row that threatens to scupper Keir Starmer’s planned EU reset.EU officials say European students should pay “home” fees of about £9,500 a year in England and Wales as part of the negotiations over a youth mobility scheme, rather than the higher international rate, which can rise above £60,000. European students would also pay the domestic rate in Scotland, which is set at £1,820 a year, although most Scottish students qualify for free tuition. Fees for Irish students In Northern Ireland are generally capped at £4,855.However, British negotiators say they have been blindsided by the demand, which they say was not mentioned in the framework agreement signed last year and would cost British universities an estimated £140m a year

about 15 hours ago
A picture

UK needs nuclear deterrent independent from US, Ed Davey to say

Britain should have a completely independent nuclear deterrent as it can no longer rely on the US, Ed Davey is expected to say on Sunday.In a speech at the Liberal Democrats spring conference, the party leader will argue that the UK should manufacture and maintain its nuclear weapons in Britain, a move that Davey acknowledges will cost billions.Davey’s speech will come amid his claims that the US president, Donald Trump, has made his support for European security “conditional” on his personal whims.“While Trump is in charge, we certainly cannot rely on America as a dependable ally in the way we used to,” Davey will say. “And we can no longer bet our nation’s security on the hope that the US won’t produce new versions of Trump in the future

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Reform UK government would replace top civil servants with those ‘more likely to implement party’s priorities’

A Reform UK government would expect to dismiss the top civil servant in every government department and replace them with people seen as more likely to implement the party’s priorities, the Guardian has learned.Senior Reform figures have concluded that the current crop of permanent secretaries, the lead civil servant in each department, are not up to the necessary standard. Some would be replaced by outsiders, and others by existing officials viewed as more suitable.The plan has prompted warnings that a shift towards a less stable and more politicised civil service could result in the loss of significant expertise and of institutional memory, and would make government less effective.Nigel Farage’s party has promised it will enact a radical programme

1 day ago
A picture

Phil Woolas, former Labour minister, dies of brain cancer aged 66

The former Labour MP minister Phil Woolas has died of brain cancer, his family and close friends have announced.Woolas, 66, was elected to parliament to represent Oldham East and Saddleworth as part of Labour’s landslide victory in the 1997 general election. He remained in Westminster for New Labour’s entire 13-year stretch in power.In government, Woolas held several ministerial roles, including being the minister of state for local government, the environment, and borders and immigration, positions that he held sequentially until Labour’s fall from power.In a statement announcing his death on Saturday, his family and close friends said: “For more than a year he battled the brain cancer glioblastoma

1 day ago
A picture

‘We are a completely different political party’: inside the Greens’ membership boom

It is, as one Green activist put it, a never-ending series of “constantly good problems to have”. But how does a party adapt to the sudden trebling of its membership? And when a majority of people in an organisation are new, is it even the same thing anymore?The basic facts alone are startling. Before Zack Polanski took over as leader last September, the Greens in England and Wales had around 66,000 members. They are now at 215,000, and still rising at speed.This means the party has many more people to knock on doors and fold leaflets, as seen with the vast numbers of canvassers the party could call on in winning last month’s Gorton and Denton byelection

2 days ago
A picture

Wealthy British nationals fleeing Gulf conflict bypass UK to avoid tax bills

Wealthy UK nationals fleeing war in the Gulf are seeking sanctuary in countries such as Ireland and France to avoid hefty tax bills back home.In the face of possible demands from HM Revenue and Customs, high-net-worth individuals who had been living in the United Arab Emirates and neighbouring countries are hoping to wait out the missile and drone attacks elsewhere rather than return to the UK.With only about three weeks remaining in the current financial year, many overseas residents have already “spent” their allocation of days in Britain without incurring tax liabilities. Some are seeking guidance from HMRC on whether they would be granted 60 extra days under an “exceptional circumstances” provision.Nimesh Shah, the chief executive of advisory firm Blick Rothenberg, said: “I’ve had a disproportionate number of calls from people wanting to leave the UAE in recent weeks

2 days ago
businessSee all
A picture

‘Cruel hoax’ or ‘work-life balance nirvana’: whatever happened to the four-day work week?

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Stout clobber? Guinness tie-up features £1,295 ‘pub carpet’ jumper

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Relief for some of Britain’s poorest lands at right moment to cushion Iran aftershocks | Heather Stewart

about 18 hours ago
A picture

One of Britain’s last major chemical plants at risk as energy prices surge

about 20 hours ago
A picture

‘The chef is a metre away from you’: the cosy allure of micro-restaurants

about 21 hours ago
A picture

Rate rises, helium shortages, EV sales spikes: how is the disruption in Iran’s strait of Hormuz affecting Australia?

1 day ago