Sports
Karachi Grammar School successfully defends Sindh Women’s Swimming Championship 2025 | The Express Tribune
																								
												
												
											
KARACHI:
Karachi Grammar School successfully defended its title by winning the 31st Palm Olive Sindh Women’s Swimming Championship 2025 with a clear lead of 533 points.
In the championship held at Karachi Gymkhana Swimming Pool, CAS School secured the second position by collecting 176.5 points, while Karachi Club stood third with 129 points.
In the championship held under the Sindh Women’s Swimming Association, 377 students from 20 local educational institutions demonstrated their skills. Several new records were also set during the championship.
The 16-year-old Hareem Malik of the winner Karachi Grammar School won the honor of being the best swimmer of the championship.
She set five new records and won a total of eight gold medals.
The special guests at the prize distribution ceremony were Zulfiqar Lakhani, famous actress Nimra Khan and Association President Seema Zuberi.
The athletes participating in the championship expressed their views and welcomed these competitions.
They said that such events are very helpful and supportive in encouraging talented and emerging athletes.
If better training opportunities are available, Pakistani Parachute athletes can participate in international competitions and bring glory to their country and nation.
Palmolive’s Fatima Siddiqui expressed her views and said that sports, especially women’s competitions, are sponsored with national spirit in mind.
Cooperation will continue for such competitions in the future as well.
The establishment of new records in the championship is a reflection of the fact that there is no shortage of talent among young athletes. If they get opportunities, they can go ahead and raise the name of Pakistan.
Sports
Victor Conte, mastermind behind BALCO steroids scandal, dead at 75
														
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Victor Conte, the central figure in one of the biggest performance-enhancing drug scandals in sports history, has died at age 75.
Conte’s company, Scientific Nutrition for Advanced Conditioning (SNAC), announced his death in a post on X, saying he had been battling pancreatic cancer.
“We are Heartbroken by the Passing of our Fearless Leader,” the post stated. “We will Honor his Wishes. SNAC and his Legacy will Carry Forward, Strong and Forever. We LOVE you, Conte!”
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Victor Conte, BALCO founder, has passed away at 75 years old. His company, SNAC, announced his death on social media. (IMAGN)
Conte’s prior venture, BALCO, made national headlines in 2003 when federal agents raided the business as well as his Northern California home as part of an investigation into the steroids scandal that rocked multiple sports leagues, most notably Major League Baseball.
He later pleaded guilty in 2005 to conspiracy to distribute steroids and money laundering, admitting to supplying performance-enhancing drugs to several high-profile athletes, including Barry Bonds, baseball’s home run king, and Olympic gold medalist Marion Jones.
MARLON BYRD NO QUALMS ABOUT WORKING WITH CONTE
While Conte expressed remorse for his role, he also reflected on his controversial legacy in a Netflix documentary:
“When Marion Jones hit the finish line and won the gold medal, when Barry Bonds hit all these home runs, you know, any of these great accomplishments, those are things that I’ll always be proud of.”

Victor Conte, founder of BALCO speaks with the media at the Federal Courthouse after his sentencing in the BALCO steroid case on October 18, 2005, in San Francisco, California. The case, which brought international attention to the steroid use by athletes, came to a close today with Victor Conte receiving four months jail time and four months of house arrest. (David Paul Morris/Getty Images)
Conte ended up serving four months in a low-security federal prison in California as part of his sentencing.
Conte’s SNAC developed and sold natural supplements, but he wasn’t completely blackballed from sports. He was an advisor in the boxing world, with clients including Terence “Bud” Crawford and Claressa Shields.
That doesn’t mean Conte didn’t still have detractors, as Crawford’s most recent fight against Canelo Alvarez brought about skeptics who believed he might be cheating with Conte on his team.
“Please don’t stress the negativity of my past too much,” Conte said, via USA TODAY before Crawford’s unanimous victory over Alvarez to make him a three-belt champion.

Founder and president of BALCO, Victor Conte speaks at the “Tribeca Talks: Injecting The American Dream” panel discussion during the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival on May 3, 2008 in New York City. (Scott Wintrow/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Conte was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in May, but continued working with athletes from his hospital bed in his final months.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Sports
No. 10 Terps dominate on defense, open the season with a comfortable win
Maryland cruised past Loyola (Maryland), 80-26, making more three-pointers than its opponent did field goals.
Source link 
Sports
UFC cuts fighter after sportsbooks flag ‘unusual’ betting activity on his first-round loss
														
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Another sports betting controversy has hit professional sports, this time in mixed martial arts.
The UFC has cut fighter Isaac Dulgarian on Monday, which comes two days after a first-round submission loss to Yadier del Valle at Fight Night in Las Vegas, according to multiple reports.
“Like many professional sports organizations, UFC works with an independent betting integrity service to monitor wagering activity on our events,” the promotion told The New York Post in a statement. “Our betting integrity partner, IC360, monitors wagering on every UFC event and is conducting a thorough review of the facts surrounding the Dulgarian vs. del Valle bout on Saturday, November 1. We take these allegations very seriously, and along with the health and safety of our fighters, nothing is more important than the integrity of our sport.”
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Yadier del Valle of Cuba secures a rear choke submission against Isaac Dulgarian in a featherweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on Nov. 01, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
Unusual betting activity was flagged for Bulgarian’s fight. Dulgarian, who is now 7-2 in his professional UFC career, was a -250 favorite, but the line moved drastically to -154 leading up to the fight.
Multiple sportsbooks flagged the unusual activity and stopped taking any bets on it before the first-round bell rang. Caesars Sportsbook even offered refunds to anyone who bet on Dulgarian.
UFC STAR COMES TO JOE ROGAN’S DEFENSE AFTER RONDA ROUSEY’S SWIPE
“Mobile customers with losing bets on the Dulgarian UFC fight will receive a cash credit within 24 hours (singles), or within 24 hours of the last leg being determine (Parlay/SGP/Super Parlay) should that bet have won without that leg included,” Caesars Sportsbook posted on X.

(L-R) Christian Rodriguez punches Isaac Dulgarian in their featherweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on March 16, 2024, in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
DraftKings also told The Post it is “aware of potential concerns” about the fight.
“We are working with our integrity monitors and will provide updates to customers as they become available.
Dulgarian, 29, lost by submission, but commentators Daniel Cormier and Michael Chiesa were confused what was happening, as they called Del Valle’s finish “white belt stuff,” believing it wasn’t the most complicated stuff.
Making Dulgarian’s situation more interesting are his comments about his belief that fighters should get a cut for bets on bouts.

Isaac Dulgarian returns to his corner after the first round of his featherweight fight against Christian Rodriguez during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on March 16, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
“I said, ‘Don’t bet on me unless you’re paying me some percentage.’ I’m doing all the work, that’s how I feel about it,” Dulgarian told MMA Junkie. “…If you’re betting on me, I want some of it.”
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
- 
																	
										
																			Tech6 days agoOpenAI says a million ChatGPT users talk about suicide
 - 
																	
										
																			Tech6 days agoHow digital technologies can support a circular economy
 - 
																	
										
																			Tech6 days agoUS Ralph Lauren partners with Microsoft for AI shopping experience
 - 
																	
										
																			Tech6 days agoAI chatbots are becoming everyday tools for mundane tasks, use data shows
 - 
																	
										
																			Fashion7 days agoITMF elects new board at 2025 Yogyakarta conference
 - 
																	
										
																			Fashion1 week agoJapan’s textile trade shows strong apparel demand, weak yarn imports
 - 
																	
										
																			Tech1 week agoHere’s How Many People May Use ChatGPT During a Mental Health Crisis Each Week
 - 
																	
										
																			Sports6 days agoMiami extends Bright deal, DP spot still open
 
