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ZetrOZ Systems Supports the Next Generation of Physician-Scientists with Sponsorship of the Orthopaedic Foundation’s Medical Immersion Program

The inventor of sustained acoustic medicine and the sam® wearable ultrasound technologies support students at an internationally known summer program and funds student and professional research through its STEM Scholarship Program. TRUMBULL, Conn., June 10, 2025 (Newswire.com) – ZetrOZ Systems, inventor of sustained acoustic medicine and the sam® wearable ultrasound device, is supporting the next […]

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The inventor of sustained acoustic medicine and the sam® wearable ultrasound technologies support students at an internationally known summer program and funds student and professional research through its STEM Scholarship Program.

ZetrOZ Systems, inventor of sustained acoustic medicine and the sam® wearable ultrasound device, is supporting the next generation of medical science through its sponsorship of the Orthopaedic Foundation’s Manhattan Medical Immersion Camp, a world-class hands-on program for aspiring physicians and medical researchers.

The Orthopaedic Foundation created the camp to provide high school and college students with the opportunity to explore a broad spectrum of medical specialties and alternative fields within healthcare, including biomedical engineering and medical devices.

ZetrOZ Systems CEO George K. Lewis, PhD, a biomedical engineer, is a member of the Foundation’s board of directors and has served on the faculty of the Medical Immersion Camp. “It is an honor to be part of the Orthopaedic Foundation’s Medical Immersion Camp and to be able to show these ambitious students how technological innovations like sustained acoustic medicine evolved out of the lab and how the sam® devices are changing the way we treat soft tissue injuries,” Lewis said.

Sustained acoustic medicine is a long-duration, continuous, multi-hour, high frequency ultrasound treatment that reduces inflammation, increases blood vessel diameters, and improves blood flow. That increases oxygenated hemoglobin at the site and removes cytokine enzymes and cellular waste, with the result of more rapid healing and reduced pain.

The treatment has been extensively studied in over 30 clinical trials for treating chronic soft tissue injuries, and through millions of treatments provided annually to patients across the United States.

Dr. Stephanie Petterson, the Orthopaedic Foundation’s director of research and clinical education program director. “One of the goals of the Medical Immersion Camp is to have students examine the field of medicine from many perspectives, including regenerative and sports medicine and physical therapy,” she said. “Sustained acoustic medicine is an important, emerging treatment in those fields, helping patients recover without surgery and or the use of potentially addictive pain medication.”

The technology behind ZetrOZ Systems’ sam® wearable ultrasound devices is defined in 48 U.S. and global patents and has been cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for home use in treating soft-tissue injuries.

ZetrOZ Systems is also supporting medical students and professionals with its second $20,000 STEM Scholarship Program. To help this generation of researchers achieve their goals, ZetrOZ Systems is providing four $5,000 scholarships to students or healthcare professionals in support of their educational or research expenses.

Applicants are required to write a 1,200-word essay on the global healthcare advancements in healing soft tissue injuries, addressing new medical technologies, mechanobiology applications and emerging clinical research trends worldwide, and a 250-word letter on their plans for the scholarship funds should they be selected as a recipient.

Applicants should submit those written pieces, as well as a current transcript of undergraduate and/or graduate studies and two professional references, to info@samrecover.com by July 31, 2025. Winners will be announced in September and October.

ZetrOZ Systems’ support of healthcare students and researchers aligns with its mission of developing innovations in medical science. For more information on ZetrOZ Systems and the revolutionary sam® wearable ultrasound device, please visit https://zetroz.com/ and www.samrecover.com.

For more information on the Orthopaedic Foundation, please visit https://ofals.org/.

About ZetrOZ Systems

ZetrOZ Systems is leading healing innovations in sports medicine, developing wearable bioelectronic devices to deliver sustained acoustic medicine (sam®). Researched and funded by the federal government, ZetrOZ is built on the proprietary medical technology of 48 patents and is the exclusive manufacturer and developer of the sam® product line, designed to treat acute and chronic musculoskeletal conditions.

About the Orthopaedic Foundation

Born of the need to promote and encourage research and education in the field of orthopaedics and sports medicine, the Orthopaedic Foundation was established in 2002 with a focus on innovation to manage osteoarthritis and other musculoskeletal diseases, prevent injury to individuals across the spectrum of activity, and develop minimally invasive treatments with shorter recovery times, to keep people active and pain-free.

Source: ZetrOZ Systems



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NBCU Says Surge in Sports Ads Boosts Upfront Sales Haul

People still want to watch sports on TV, and that means — at least for now — advertisers still need to spend on it. NBCUniversal said Tuesday that its new 11-year deal for NBA rights resulted in a 15% increase in “upfront” ad commitments across its core broadcast offerings of news, sports and entertainment, with […]

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People still want to watch sports on TV, and that means — at least for now — advertisers still need to spend on it.

NBCUniversal said Tuesday that its new 11-year deal for NBA rights resulted in a 15% increase in “upfront” ad commitments across its core broadcast offerings of news, sports and entertainment, with a quarter of its NBA sponsors new to traditional linear TV. The Comcast-backed media conglomerate also said it saw “record sales commitments overall,” and “delivered its largest digital Upfront in history,” though it offered no estimates on the amount of volume it secured. The value of its commitments across its media holdings is expected to be in excess of $7 billion — a total NBCU last made public in 2022.

In the “upfront,” U.S. media companies vie to sell the bulk of their commercial inventory for their next cycle of programming, and there has been concern that tariff negotiations by the Trump White House might dampen Madison Avenue’s appetite to spend on TV. Traditional TV companies are also contending with the rise of digital giants such as YouTube, Netflix and Amazon’s Prime Video, along with other one-time upstarts.

NBCU moved early this year to win ad support for a massive cache of sports inventory tied to 2026 telecasts of the Milan Cortina Olympics, Super Bowl LX and the FIFA World Cup. NBC was asking for $7 million for a 30-second spot in the Super Bowl, according to people familiar with the sales process, and is likely sold out of much of its inventory tied to the gridiron classic.

Many of the company’s properties benefitted from the company’s sports-heavy offering. NBCU said its Peacock streaming service saw a 20% increase in volume, and now represents “nearly 1/3 of NBCUniversal’s total Upfront commitments.” The Telemundo Spanish-language network also saw new levels of volume, NBCU said, with ad revenue committed to next year’s Spanish-language World Cup telecast already exceeding the revenue for the previous World Cup with over 10 months until kickoff.”

“The response has been extraordinary, and we are incredibly grateful for our partners’ trust and collaboration,” said Mark Marshall, chairman of NBCU’s ad-sales and partnerships operations, in a prepared statement. “With a cross-platform strategy supercharged by cutting-edge technology, we’re proud to engage 286 million people monthly — setting a new standard and delivering the most successful Upfront in our company’s history.”  

The upfront sports marketplace has been particularly “aggressive,” says one media buyer familiar with recent negotiations, with ad slots in many top events scheduled for the fourth quarter largely out of sale at many of the TV companies. This executive says demand was particularly intense for NFL inventory, with NBA interest heightened for digital games. The move from Warner to NBC, says this buyer, offers some complications, as advertisers may want to consider whether the new slates of games on broadcast will capture the bigger potential audience that tunes into the medium. This buyer suggested that most networks with NBA rights will likely have more inventory to sell, while media companies with NFL events — including Amazon’s “Black Friday” game stream or Netflix’s Christmas game — probably have less time on their hands.

Sports has been key to the ad-sales game so far this year. There is no other programming format that continues to dependably generate the large, simultaneous viewing audiences that advertisers and distributors crave. NBCU was likely able to use demand for its sports properties to generate sales and deals tied to other kinds of programming.

Indeed, the company revealed Tuesday that advertisers even contributed more money to the cable networks tied to Versant, the portion of NBCU that is expected to be spun off into a separate, publicly traded entity by Comcast later in 2025. The portfolio of networks tied to the new company, which include MSNBC, CNBC and USA, saw a nearly 10% increase “in clients investing in its brands,” NBCU said. In recent years, media companies have used cable properties, increasingly falling out of favor in the streaming era as more viewers stream dramas and comedies at times of their own choosing, as “sweeteners” in negotiations, giving favorable deals in order to secure better rates for sports and broadcast events.

Whether NBCU’s performance is indicative of the industry as a whole remains to be seen. A good chunk of its new upfront wealth — NBCU said it saw a 45% increase in ad commitments tied to sports programming — may simply be the result of a transfer of dollars once earmarked for Warner Bros. Discovery’s NBA schedule, which aired for years on TNT. Some portion of that money may also be coming from rivals that are more heavily dependent on cable.

NBCU disclosed that more of its advertising base is tied to new types of sales. The company said it saw an uptick in deals from small- and medium-sized advertisers that have typically not struck deals with media companies heavily reliant on national TV media. In the streaming era, these same companies can sell digital inventory that shows up in specific geographic regions or alongside viewers with specific interests or buying traits. Indeed, NBCU said nearly 60% of ad investments are being made against so-called “advanced audiences.” The company said its programmatic business — ads that rely on algorithms to snatch up specific kinds of inventory tied to the type of viewers an advertiser seeks — came to $1 billion.

Top categories included retail, restaurants, auto, travel and financial services, NBCU said, each of which increased ad commitments by about 12%. Movie and TV studios also played a significant role in the sales process.

Executives on both sides of the table say media companies have been able to win increases in certain kinds of CPMs, a measure of how much it costs for an ad to reach 1,000 viewers — a metric that is central in these discussions between media companies and advertisers. Sports ads were generating what has been estimated to be CPMs in the high-single-digit percentage range, while CPM increase were projected to be the low-single-digit percentage range for commercials tied to traditional linear broadcast. Some of the uptick in linear CPMs isn’t driven by a robust market, but by the fact that the networks have less traditional entertainment to sell and smaller audiences projected to watch what remains.

There have been some expectations that many of the media companies would agree to “rollbacks” in digital CPMs, owing to the introduction of massive amounts of streaming inventory from Amazon and Netflix, among other venues.

TV networks favor the upfront market because it allows them to build support for their programs well ahead of their debut. Still, the advertising bazaar has been tougher to navigate in recent years as more people gravitate to streaming video and other means of accessing their favorite programs, movies, news and sports events.

Ad commitments for the most recent cycle of primetime broadcast TV fell 3.5% in 2024’s upfront market, to $9.34 billion, according to Media Dynamics Inc., while commitments for primetime on cable tumbled 4.8%, to $9.065 billion. Meanwhile, ad commitments to streaming video hubs rose a noticeable 35.3%, hiking to $11.1 billion from $8.2 billion in the previous market. The amount committed to streaming video for the most recent TV season was greater than that devoted to primetime broadcast or primetime cable — a first for the industry.



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Fitbit’s Charge 6 fitness tracker is at its lowest price ever at Walmart

The Fitbit Charge 6 is one of the best fitness trackers we’ve tested, and down to an all-time low price of $93 ($66.95 off) at Walmart. The deal includes a six-month subscription to Fitbit Premium, a service that includes guided workouts, a wellness report, and other perks, and usually costs $10 per month or $80 […]

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The Fitbit Charge 6 is one of the best fitness trackers we’ve tested, and down to an all-time low price of $93 ($66.95 off) at Walmart. The deal includes a six-month subscription to Fitbit Premium, a service that includes guided workouts, a wellness report, and other perks, and usually costs $10 per month or $80 per year. You can get the Charge 6 for $99.95 ($60 off), along with the same six-month subscription, at Amazon.

The Charge 6 is the only fitness tracker under $200 with an FDA-cleared EKG reader, and it’s better at measuring your heart rate than its predecessor. It can also track your blood oxygen level, sleep, and activity. Fitbit made strides to reach feature parity with fitness smartwatches by adding Bluetooth compatibility with exercise equipment and an NFC chip to the Charge 6, which allows you to use Google Wallet. It also has apps for Google Maps and YouTube Music, so you can use those services without reaching for your phone.

Verge reviewer Victoria Song’s chief complaint with the Charge 6 was that enabling its always-on display reduced its battery life from seven days to two. You’ll also need to have an active Google account because Fitbit has migrated away from its own account system. For an in-depth view of the Charge 6, you can read our review.

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Premier League-Microsoft AI might for fans

Image: Coliseum GSVA The Premier League (UK) has announced a five-year partnership with the multinational technology corporation Microsoft to launch the Premier League Companion, an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered digital tool for the fans. With launch set ahead of the 2025-2026 seasons the Companion will evolve further based on the fan feedback, the usage patterns and […]

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Premier League partners with Microsoft for its digital platforms
Image: Coliseum GSVA

The Premier League (UK) has announced a five-year partnership with the multinational technology corporation Microsoft to launch the Premier League Companion, an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered digital tool for the fans.

With launch set ahead of the 2025-2026 seasons the Companion will evolve further based on the fan feedback, the usage patterns and the language needs.

‘Technology MAGAZINE’ stated that football’s global audience is expanding fast and the Premier League is using AI technology to keep up.

London (UK)-based the Premier League is a professional association football league in England and the highest level of the English football league system. Contested by 20 clubs it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the English Football League (EFL – a league of professional football clubs from England and Wales).

The Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational corporation and technology conglomerate headquartered in Redmond, Washington (US). Founded in 1975, the company became influential in the rise of personal computers through software like Windows and the company has since expanded to Internet services, cloud computing, video gaming, and other fields. Microsoft is the largest software maker, one of the most valuable public companies in the United States and one of the most valuable brands globally.

As part of a five-year deal the Microsoft has become the league’s official cloud and AI partner providing tools that reshape how fans engage with the game.

At the heart of this collaboration is the Premier League Companion, a new AI-driven platform designed to serve the supporters with real-time data, historic insights and personalized content.

The system runs on Microsoft’s Azure OpenAI Service, a cloud-based platform that grants access to powerful natural language models including OpenAI’s (American Artificial Intelligence organization) Generative Pre-trained Transformer 4 (GPT-4 – a multimodal large language model).
 

Natural Language Meets Premier League Data

‘Technology MAGAZINE’ further stated that the Premier League Companion uses Microsoft Copilot to respond to the fans’ questions in natural language. Built into Microsoft’s Azure AI infrastructure it can process vast amounts of information drawing from three decades of Premier League data. That means 30 seasons of statistics, 300,000 articles and 9,000 videos are now at a fan’s fingertips.

Supporters can type or speak questions like “How many times has my club been relegated?” or “What are the best five goals of all time?” and get immediate answers, often with the video clips attached.

Stated Satya Nadella, Chairman-cum-Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Microsoft, “We’re teaming up with the Premier League to bring one billion-plus fans closer than ever to the game they love.”

Will Brass, Chief Commercial Officer for the Premier League, explains the thinking behind the tool, “Our role is to create value for our clubs by engaging with as many fans as we can and bringing them into the Premier League ecosystem. Ultimately, a big part of that is making sure our channels are best equipped to engage with those fans and, more importantly, deliver to the fans what they want.”

The Premier League now reaches 1.8 billion viewers in 189 countries and, according to Brass, around one-third of the league’s global following has joined only in the past few years.

With that growth comes the demand for smarter, more accessible content.

The Companion uses agentic architecture, a term that refers to the AI models capable of independently gathering and processing data from various sources to provide context-aware responses. In practical terms, it means the fans get more precise, more relevant answers to whatever they ask.
 

Cloud-based Archives and Smarter Operations

The collaboration extends beyond the public platforms. Microsoft’s Azure cloud services will host the Premier League’s historic content archive improving how the league delivers the clips and the statistics to its global broadcast partners.

Added Brass, “Moving the historic Premier League archive onto Azure that’s all part of our ability to both curate the content for our own channels but also to better serve our broadcast licensees around the world. It ensures that the content, which is rich and exciting and historic, is as readily available as can be, both to us and to our partners.”

Behind the scenes the Microsoft 365 will support the daily workflows while the Power Platform and Dynamics 365 will be used for automation and enterprise resource planning. These tools aim to streamline internal operations and improve collaboration across Premier League Departments.

Over time, the Companion will include more than 35,000 pre-set prompts and the future plans involve supporting the open-ended questions, offering personalized club suggestions and integrating the translation features across multiple languages. The audio match summaries are also in development.
 

Tailored Football Content for every Supporter

Alexandra Willis, Director of Digital Media and Audience Development for the Premier League, believes the Companion’s biggest strength lies in its flexibility to serve both the lifelong supporters and the newcomers.

Opined Willis, “What the clubs are excited about with this partnership is the ability of the Premier League to bring new fans in, encourage them to discover and learn more about the league and then ultimately form a relationship with a club and develop that lifelong affinity with a club.”

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Fitness & Wellness Brands Must Embrace Hospitality Principles, Leaders Say

As new technology continues to proliferate, top executives believe brands that hone in on the human touch will win in 2025 and beyond In an industry filled to the brim with cutting-edge technology, it’s easy to forget the value of a warm greeting at the door, a clean and comfortable environment or a staff that’s […]

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As new technology continues to proliferate, top executives believe brands that hone in on the human touch will win in 2025 and beyond

In an industry filled to the brim with cutting-edge technology, it’s easy to forget the value of a warm greeting at the door, a clean and comfortable environment or a staff that’s willing to do your laundry. The brands that don’t forget the value of hospitality will emerge as winners in this new era of fitness and wellness, if they aren’t already. 

That was the collective understanding Jay Galluzzo, partner at Sabre Business Consulting, Brian Mazza, vice president of brand performance at Life Time and founder of HPL Ventures, Robbie Bent, co-founder and CEO of Othership, and Mark Rivers, CEO of Canyon Ranch, shared at the ATN Innovation Summit 2025. 

“We’ve been incorporating hospitality principles into fitness and wellness for a long time and it’s just now become something,” Galluzzo said. “It’s become a thing and it’s allowed that mindset to shift from, ‘How do I keep my member?’ to, ‘How do I make such a special environment that my member always wants to be here?’”

Crafting that environment takes effort from the top down, an eye for gaps in the industry and a touch of creativity. 

Why Hospitality Pays Off

Bent, whose Othership just raised funding for continued expansion, argues that creating welcoming, honest environments where openness is encouraged goes a long way in establishing a distinctive sense of hospitality. That can include encouraging members to connect with each other or simply going the extra mile to support them. In one instance, Bent did so by helping organize and document a marriage proposal. 

“They legitimately called me and said they wanted to do a proposal,” Bent recalled. “So I met with him in advance, recorded what he said about his wife, and then they did a class together.”

Bent estimated the whole thing cost Othership around $2,000 to $3,000, but the intrigue it generated around the brand more than made up for that, and the hospitable vibe it established was priceless.

“At the end of the class, we had a videographer hiding (who) recorded him getting down on one knee to propose. Then we made that video for them, free of charge, and gave it to them,” Bent said. “I find these moments of high-touch hospitality that you haven’t seen in wellness studios or at gyms are what make people share about your brand. As a result, we don’t really do any paid ads. The majority of our marketing has come from that really intense customer relationship.”

Brian Mazza and Robbie Bent at the ATN Innovation Summit
Brian Mazza and Robbie Bent (credit: Flickman Media)

Rivers agreed on the importance of the customer-to-operator dynamic, even declaring this era in the wellness industry the “human connection chapter.”

“We can all build great mouse traps, and we do, and sometimes that will bring people back,” he said. “But I think what makes you part of a community, or makes it special or unforgettable, is that human connection you have with the people you meet, that you touch, that provide you guidance, help influence your life and can make your life relaxing or reset it.”

How Operators Can Implement Hospitality

However, bringing about an unprecedented level of hospitality is easier said than done, especially across locations. Still, top brands are doing their best. 

Bent added that every week, Othership operators take turns sharing their best hospitality stories. Those with the best stories are rewarded with prizes. This prompts operators to ask themselves what the craziest thing they could do to please is, someone week in and week out. 

“Somebody came in the other day, got stuck in the rain, came into the space soaked,” Bent said. “We took their jacket, and unexpected to them while they’re in class, we ran into the back and dry cleaned it so when they came out, all their clothes were ready. Then, that person is like, ‘Wow, I’m going to go tell 100 people that that happened.’”

At the end of the day, hospitality can be simple to implement for fitness and wellness brands.

“We’re all human, right? We all want to be loved,” Mazza reminded. “We all want to be liked. We all want to get attention. It costs nothing to be kind. That’s what hospitality is.”

Mazza also noted the importance of “walking the walk” as an executive to make sure principles are carried out at all levels. 

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“You can’t expect people to follow you if you’re not going to do everything, if you’re not going to be willing to clean up something on the ground in your facility,” he said. “How are you going to expect your teammates and your staff to see and get inspired? No one’s bigger than the team.”

Rivers noted the importance of hiring passionate staff as well. You can never discount what he called the “heart” side of a business, such as service and making warm connections, to only focus on the “brain,” with things like running daily operations. 

Mark Rivers at ATN Innovation Summit
Mark Rivers (credit: Flickman Media)

In the coming years, the panelists agreed that fitness consumers will come to prioritize even more human connection.

“Community is undefeated,” Mazza said. “We’re seeing it with run clubs. People want that human connection. They’re thirsty for it. The world is so convoluted with these apps and all of these things, and it’s necessary, but nothing will ever be the human connection.”

“There’s a need,” Bent added. “People are more lonely than ever. They have fewer close friends than ever.” 

This article is based on a live discussion held during the ATN Innovation Summit 2025, a two-day event dedicated to the future of fitness and wellness. See here for more Innovation Summit coverage. 





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The New Science of Superhumans: The BioSport™ AI System Unlocks Hidden Athlete Potential

CALGARY, Alberta and NEW YORK, July 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In a move that signals a new era in athlete safety and performance science, The BioSport™ Health Inc, a precision health technology company, today unveiled its Global Advisory Board—a diverse group of elite athletes, scientists, and financial leaders—to help guide its upcoming global platform […]

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CALGARY, Alberta and NEW YORK, July 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In a move that signals a new era in athlete safety and performance science, The BioSport™ Health Inc, a precision health technology company, today unveiled its Global Advisory Board—a diverse group of elite athletes, scientists, and financial leaders—to help guide its upcoming global platform launch set for Fall 2025.

In the high-stakes world of elite sports, the difference between triumph and tragedy can hinge on a single, unseen biological flaw. A hidden cardiac risk. A lingering inflammation. A genetic predisposition to injury. These silent threats have ended promising careers and lives—sometimes on live television, in front of millions. Despite decades of progress in training, sports medicine, and wearables, athletes in America and around the world are still falling victim to the same recurring issues: overexertion injuries, cardiac complications, and unidentified physical strengths or weaknesses. Coaches often guess at recovery timelines. Team selections rely on surface performance metrics. Even top athletes rarely know what their bodies are truly built for—or how to protect that biological gift.

Built on a foundation of genomics, microbiome analysis, and artificial intelligence, The BioSport™’s platform promises to tackle some of the most urgent and persistent problems in athletics:

  • Overexertion-related injuries, including ACL tears, muscle breakdown, and stress fractures.
  • Sudden cardiac events, still the leading cause of death among athletes during play.
  • Inequities in athlete selection, driven by outdated performance metrics.
  • And the widespread lack of awareness around an athlete’s true biological potential.

“Despite all the technology on the sidelines, athletes are still breaking down,” said Dr. Anmol S. Kapoor, a Cardiologist and Founder of Kapoor Wealth Partners, a next-generation wealth advisory and investment firm from Abu Dhabi. “We’ve been treating symptoms and guessing recovery times. What we need is a biological blueprint—customized care based on what each athlete’s body is built for. That’s what The BioSport™ delivers.”

A Precision Platform for the Future of Sport

At the core of The BioSport™ platform is the BioFit Score, a patent-pending tool that analyzes over 15,000 human genetic variants alongside gut microbiome data to evaluate:

  • Injury risk
  • Recovery capacity
  • Cardiac predispositions
  • Endurance and power potential
  • Mental stress markers
  • Hormonal and inflammatory states

This information is synthesized by PanOmiQ™ of BioAro Inc, World’s Fastest AI powered MultiOmics Platform, integrated with wearable data (HRV, sleep, workload), and delivered through easy-to-use dashboards and athlete mobile apps.

The goal: to empower athletes, coaches, and medical teams to make real-time, precision-based decisions around training, nutrition, rest, and risk. Using AI and data from wearables, The BioSport™ transforms these layers into real-time reports and recommendations. The result? Coaches and athletes can adjust training loads, spot warning signs, and optimize nutrition based on the athlete’s unique biology—not generic formulas.

“Think of it as GPS for your body,” says Patrick Kirkwood, CEO of The BioSport™ Health Inc. “We give athletes a roadmap to reach their peak—and avoid the cliffs.”

A Global Board with Deep Roots in Sport, Science & Strategy

To support this ambitious rollout, The BioSport™ has appointed a powerhouse Global Advisory Board:

  • Grant Fuhr – NHL Hall of Fame goalie and 5x Stanley Cup Champion
  • Christina Nathalie Smith, OLY – Olympic bobsleigh pioneer
  • Nik Lewis – CFL Hall of Famer and all-time receptions leader
  • Paul O’Donoghue – Energy and tech entrepreneur, corporate strategist
  • H.E. Prof. Dr. Zahid Haque – Global sports diplomat and anti-doping advocate
  • Kurt Soost, CFA – Veteran investment executive and capital markets expert
  • Nick Wilson, OLY – Olympian and high-performance strategist

“This is the kind of platform that changes lives,” said Grant Fuhr, NHL Hall of Famer goalie, who faced the pressures of elite sport firsthand. “It’s not just about performance—it’s about knowing your risks before it’s too late. We didn’t have this in my day. Athletes need it now. The BioSport™ is the innovation I wish we had when I played.”

Even with the rise of wearable devices, training apps, and sports science labs, there’s a major blind spot: biological individuality.

According to recent U.S. sports medicine data:

  • Overexertion injuries account for over 35% of sports-related medical visits.
  • Sudden cardiac death remains the leading cause of mortality in youth athletes, particularly in high-intensity sports.
  • Early specialization has been directly linked to burnout and chronic pain by late adolescence.

“There’s no one-size-fits-all in human biology,” said Patrick Kirkwood. “Two athletes may look identical on paper, but one could be biologically prone to injury or cardiac strain. That’s why this platform matters—it brings clarity to the chaos.”

The company aims to set a new global standard in sports health, not just for professionals but for youth, amateur, and collegiate athletes as well. The BioSport™ platform is currently in pilot use with select professional clubs, Olympic training centers, and youth academies. A full-scale launch is scheduled for Fall 2025, targeting markets across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia-Pacific.

Platform features include:

  • Genomic and microbiome test kits (clinic or home use)
  • AI-integrated dashboards for athletes and coaches
  • Mobile apps for personalized recovery and planning
  • Physician portals and teleconsultation access with genomics specialists
  • Wearable integrations for continuous performance monitoring

“The BioSport™ isn’t just a health tool—it’s a safety net for high-risk individuals,” added Dr. Kapoor. “We’re building a future where no one gets sidelined because of something preventable.”

The BioSport™ isn’t just helping athletes chase gold—it’s helping them keep their careers, their dreams, and their futures intact. It’s about Powering Superhumans.


About The BioSport™

The BioSport™ is a Canada- and U.S.-based next generation sports health technology company focused on enhancing athlete performance and longevity through genomics, microbiome intelligence, and AI-powered personalization. The platform is backed by proprietary IP, global partnerships, and a vision to create the new global standard in athlete health intelligence.

The BioSport™ Brand Ambassador


Hayden Mayeur

Two-Time World Championship Medalist & Canada’s Reigning Men’s Mass Start Champion

Media Contact

media@theBioSport.com
www.theBioSport.com

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/4cf136e9-2de5-4dbf-9cf1-91b3d4a6ff73

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d90ca089-d861-4ad1-aa94-a106e3bb5f1b


Powering Superhumans

The BioSport tagline

The BioSport™ Brand Ambassador

Hayden Mayeur Two-Time World Championship Medalist & Canada’s Reigning Men’s Mass Start Champion



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New Plug and Play in Frisco part of city’s vision to become major pull for VC dollars

Frisco’s vision of becoming a hub for tech startups seemed far-fetched 10 years ago, when Aditya Varanasi was first trying to launch his digital marketing company. That hope, he says, is now far more credible. The tech sector has boomed in recent years, and Frisco leaders say the city is ready to capitalize on that […]

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Frisco’s vision of becoming a hub for tech startups seemed far-fetched 10 years ago, when Aditya Varanasi was first trying to launch his digital marketing company. That hope, he says, is now far more credible.

The tech sector has boomed in recent years, and Frisco leaders say the city is ready to capitalize on that growth.

At a ribbon-cutting event in May, Mayor Jeff Cheney welcomed Silicon Valley-based Plug and Play Tech Center to Frisco. The accelerator and venture capital firm will partner with Frisco to manage the city’s 6,200-square-foot innovation hub and co-working space.

“We really wanted to lean into having our own startup culture in Frisco,” Cheney said.

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‘Something really special here.’ $1.3B development slated for McKinney

Varanasi’s company, Awarity, is among the dozens of startups that hope to benefit from the hub, located at Baylor Scott & White’s sports therapy and research center.

“You’re slowly starting to see the snowball pick up,” Varanasi said.

Frisco’s startup-friendly identity has only recently gained momentum, Varanasi said. Plug and Play, which also has an office in McKinney, is a big part of that push.

The city’s partnership with Plug and Play is part of a mission to make Frisco a major attraction for venture capital dollars. Earlier this year, the Frisco Economic Development Corp. announced startup industry expert Jon Nordby as its first-ever venture capitalist in residence.

“Frisco represents a rare convergence of resources, talent, and access which creates the perfect environment to redefine investing in the central United States,” Nordby said in a statement earlier this year.

Startups accepted into Plug and Play’s accelerator programs get access to networking events, mentorship opportunities, as well as office space for collaboration and workshops.

The new Plug and Play location will be the first to be focused on sports tech, but will also host programs for financial tech companies.

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Frisco is home to more than 500 startups and 130 of those are in the sports tech industry, according to the city.

David Steele, director of Plug and Play Frisco, said accelerator programs will be able to accommodate as many as 50 companies each year.

“You look at Frisco, Sports City USA. You have the Mavericks and the Stars playing in downtown Dallas. Look at everything that happens in Arlington,” Steele said. “I think the entire D-FW market as a whole is kind of this sports mecca.”

In 2020, Adam McAbee co-founded StadiumDrop, a mobile delivery app that allows people at live sports events to order merchandise, food and beverages from concession stands from their seats.

McAbee credited the Cowboys headquarters, the PGA of America and Toyota Stadium to city leaders’ vision to make Frisco the “center of sports.”

“From a sports tech aspect of it, I can see Frisco being the hub,” McAbee said.

Startups like Awarity, StadiumDrop and others are also finding opportunities for partnerships with colleges and universities in North Texas to find talent.

David Cauthron, co-founder chief technology officer of financial technology company Outpave, said the company was pleasantly surprised to find a large population of people willing to work at tech startups.

“It’s great to pull engineering resources that you don’t have to go to Silicon Valley to get,” Cauthron said.

Varanasi said he hopes the Frisco Plug and Play’s reputation in the tech industry will attract more entrepreneurs to the area and inspire the collaboration that fueled the success of other startup hubs around the country.

“Take the dollars out of the picture for a second, and what you’ve got in these places is all the like-minded individuals,” Varanasi said.



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