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Gatorade

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Gatorade
TypeNutrient Enhanced Sports Drink Beverage
ManufacturerQuaker Oats Company;
PepsiCo
Country of origin USA
Introduced1965
Websitegatorade.com Edit this on Wikidata

Gatorade is a brand of flavored non-carbonated sports drinks manufactured by the Quaker Oats Company, now a division of PepsiCo. Intended for consumption during physically active occasions, Gatorade beverages are formulated to rehydrate and replenish fluid, carbohydrates and electrolytes.

History

Gatorade bottle with new 2009 rebranded label

Robert Cade, Dana Shires, Harry James Free, and Alejandro de Quesada were the medical researchers at the University of Florida who created the original Gatorade thirst quencher in 1965.[1] The Gators football coach, Ray Graves, was frustrated with the performance of his players during the hot summer football practices, and asked the team doctor, one of Cade’s associates, for his insight. Cade and his research team came across the unique mix of water, sodium, sugar, potassium, phosphate, and lemon juice that is now known as Gatorade in honor of the football team, the Gators. The football team credited Gatorade with their first Orange Bowl win over the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in 1967, and the drink became an instant phenomenon. The Yellow Jackets coach Bud Carson, when asked why they lost, replied: "We didn’t have Gatorade. That made the difference."[2]

Shortly after, Cade partnered with Stokely-Van Camp, Inc. (S-VC) to produce and distribute the product. A year after its commercial introduction, Gatorade was reformulated to remove the sweetener cyclamate, which was banned by the FDA.[3] The Quaker Oats Company bought S-VC in 1983, after a bidding war with rival Pillsbury. Quaker licensed manufacturing of Gatorade in some worldwide markets to PepsiCo, but sued Pepsi in Australia in 1998, alleging Pepsi had misappropriated Gatorade trade secrets to manufacture its own sports drink, All Sport. Quaker won the Australian case.[3] In the meantime, the University of Florida has received royalties for Gatorade each year, since their settlement with Cade in 1973.[4]

Gatorade is the official sports drink of the National Football League,[5] Major League Baseball,[6] National Basketball Association,[7] Women's National Basketball Association,[8] USA Basketball,[9] National Hockey League,[10] Association of Volleyball Professionals,[11] US Soccer Federation,[12] Major League Soccer,[13] and many other pro and collegiate organizations, providing supplies of the drinks to the teams in all flavors available. Gatorade extended their market to the U.K. in 2008 and promoted this in part by becoming the sports drink provider for Chelsea F.C..

In 2009 Gatorade commissioned a web series called Blokhedz which served as a prequel to the Blokhedz graphic novel. The Episodes aired on missiong.com

Composition

Template:Infobox nutrition facts

The original Gatorade contained water, sucrose (table sugar) and glucose-fructose syrups, citric acid, fish oil, sodium chloride (table salt), sodium citrate, monopotassium phosphate,and flavoring/coloring ingredients. Some Gatorade flavorings use brominated vegetable oil as a stabilizer.[14] Gatorade Thirst Quencher meets the Food and Drug Administration’s definition of a "low sodium product." Gatorade is available in a variety of flavors, including the original Lemon-Lime, Grape, Orange, and Fruit punch.[15]

Several new formulations of Gatorade, each minor tweaks of the original Gatorade formula, have been produced in the past decade, including Rain, AM, Fierce and X-Factor.

Gatorade revealed the Gatorade line Energy Bar in 1999. This energy bar was Gatorade's first foray into solid foods, and was introduced to compete with PowerBar and Clif Bar. Gatorade Energy Bars contain a large proportion of protein in addition to its carbohydrates. The bar is mainly made up of puffed grains and corn syrup, common components of energy bars.

In 2000, Gatorade introduced Propel Fit Water, a vitamin enhanced water that is artificially sweetened with sucralose and acesulfame potassium. Propel has the same electrolytes as Gatorade, along with some vitamins, which makes it similar to Vitamin Water, though Vitamin Water has substantial amounts of sugar. Propel Fitness Water with Calcium was introduced in 2006.[16] Also, in 2006, Gatorade introduced its Rain flavor line, which features a lighter, crisp taste similar to its Propel line but which comes in the bottle size and shape as the original Gatorade. In late 2007, a lower-calorie line of Gatorade drinks, named G2, was released.[17]

In 2001, Gatorade introduced the Gatorade Performance Series, a special line of sports nutrition products. These products include Gatorade Carbohydrate Energy Drink, Gatorade Protein Recovery Shake, the Gatorade Nutrition Shake and the Gatorade Nutrition Bar.[18] The Endurance Formula, introduced in 2004, contains twice the sodium and three times the potassium than the typical Gatorade formula, as well as chloride, magnesium and calcium, to better replace what athletes lose while training and competing.

In the United States, Gatorade is now sweetened with high fructose corn syrup. [19]

A Gatorade G2 Bottle

In 2009 Gatorade commissioned a web series called Blokhedz which served as a prequel to the Blokhedz graphic novel. The Episodes aired on missiong.com[20]

G2: Off the Field Hydration

Template:Infobox nutrition facts

G2: Off the Field Hydration, otherwise known as Gatorade 2 (G2), is a low calorie electrolyte beverage that was launched in late 2007 G2 is currently available in six flavors: Orange, Fruit Punch, Lemon-Lime, Strawberry Kiwi, Blueberry-Pomegranate, and Grape. It is also labeled as a healthy choice beverage. [21] It was the top new food product of 2008, generating the sales of $159.1 million.[22]

Gatorade Tiger

Gatorade Tiger is a Gatorade Thirst Quencher drink formulated for Tiger Woods in flavors he selected. Debuting in March 2008, Gatorade Tiger is available in Red Drive (cherry), Cool Fusion (lemon lime) and Quiet Storm (grape). Gatorade Tiger contains 25% more electrolytes than Gatorade Thirst Quencher.[23][24]

2009 Rebranding

In 2009, Gatorade began a massive rebranding, resulting in new names for most of their products. Some products only had name changes:[25]

  • Original Gatorade is now known as Gatorade G.
  • Gatorade Rain is now known as No Excuses.

Other products were reformulated as well.[25]

  • Gatorade AM is now known as Shine On, which now contains the addition of 20% RDV of Vitamin C per 8-oz. serving.
  • Gatorade X-Factor is now known as Be Tough, which now contains the addition of 20% RDV of Vitamin E per 8-oz. serving.
  • Gatorade Fierce is now known as Bring It, which now contains the addition of 25% RDV of several B vitamins, including B3, B5 and B6.
  • Gatorade Tiger is now known as Focus, and adds the amino acid theanine, naturally found in many forms of tea, which is purported to improve mental focus. Focus contains about 25 mg per 8-oz. serving, or 50 mg per half-litre (16.9 oz) bottle. Focus is still endorsed by Tiger Woods, and bottles still feature his likeness.
  • G2, which was not renamed, now contains the same added B vitamins as Bring It.

Gator Gum

In the late 1970s and early 1980s (as well as the late 90s to early 2000s), Gatorade sold a brand of chewing gum called Gator Gum. The product, manufactured by Fleer Corporation, was available in both of Gatorade's original flavors (lemon-lime and orange) and was rather sour-tasting by normal chewing gum standards.

In the late 1970s, Stokley-Van Camp (owner of Gatorade prior to 1983) negotiated a long-term licensing deal with Swell and Vicks to market "Gator Gum." The gum, which had no functionality or ingredients of Gatorade Thirst Quencher, was discontinued in 1989 after the contract expired. Mueller Sports in Wisconsin manufactures a gum called Quench. It is based on Gator Gum but is not the same as what Stokley-Van Camp created.

Gator Gum's foil packaging advertised that the product "Helps Quench Thirst." However like all chewing gums, the product would not actually rehydrate the body on its own. However, it did contain electrolytes to assist the human body with the rehydration process.

Gatorade has been the subject of much attention and reference in several pop culture situations.

  • Perhaps the most notable presence of Gatorade is the "Gatorade shower" (originally called The Gatorade Dunk) at the end of an American football game, where players from a victorious team grab the Gatorade cooler, sneak up behind the head coach, and pour the contents over his head. This tradition began in the mid-1980s when Harry Carson and Jim Burt of the New York Giants doused head coach Bill Parcells during the 1985 season. Burt's teammates picked up on this practice and popularized it during the team's championship season of 1986-87. The tradition gained widespread popularity, and now coaches at all levels get the shower.[26]
  • On the album, That's the Way It Is (3 disc box-set), Elvis Presley can be distinctly heard asking for Gatorade while performing in concert at the International Hotel in Las Vegas.
  • Gatorade's 1991 "Be Like Mike" ads featured Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls, a North American basketball team (who had just won their first NBA championship). The ads began airing in August 1991 and soon the phrase 'Be Like Mike' became a household phrase all over America. Bernie Pitzel, Creative Director of Bayer Bess Vanderwarker, Gatorade's Agency of record at the time, wrote the lyrics. Composers Steve Shafer and Ira Antellis wrote the music.[27]
  • The Connecticut legislature passed a law in 2006 that banned soda from being sold in public schools. Despite Gatorade's image as a health-conscious beverage, the drink was also banned.[28]
  • In the 1998 movie The Waterboy, the team's head football coach taunts the waterboy (actor Adam Sandler) in a daydream saying "Gatorade not only quenches your thirst better, it tastes better too."[29]
  • In the 2001 movie Dr. Dolittle 2, John (Eddie Murphy) sees one of his animal patients, Drunk Monkey (voiced by Phil Procter) drinking something in a glass bottle. John asks what was he drinking and the monkey tells him "Gatorade". John takes the bottle and sniffs it. He scolds the monkey by saying "So Gatorade makes wine now?!".

Competition

Gatorade's main competition is POWERade, made by the Coca-Cola Company. In April 2009 Pepsi sued Coca-Cola to stop an advertisement campaign saying Powerade ION4 is superior to Gatorade. Coca-Cola claim Powerade contains calcium and magnesium which Gatorade does not.[30]

CeraSport made by Cera Products Inc. is a non-glucose, rice-based oral rehydration and performance drink. All Sport is a competitor marketed by The Monarch Beverage Company, of Atlanta, Georgia. All Sport was marketed by PepsiCo until 2001, when Gatorade's maker, the Quaker Oats Company was acquired by PepsiCo. All Sport was sold off to the Monarch Beverage Company soon after.

Outside the United States the Lucozade energy drink (manufactured since 1927 by the pharmaceutical company now known as GlaxoSmithKline) competes with Gatorade and Powerade. Lucozade's formulation differs in that it uses primarily glucose and contains caffeine. The more direct competitor to Gatorade and Powerade is Lucozade Sport, however whilst Powerade and Lucozade are widely available in the United Kingdom, Gatorade did not have full distribution in the UK until PepsiCo's UK beverage distributor, Britvic, began selling it across the country in 2008.

Common substitutes

A number of "electrolyte replacement drinks" have been introduced in both commercial and non-commercial contexts. Two of the more popular ones are:

See also: Oral rehydration therapy

Product reviews

References

  1. ^ "Born in the Lab". Gatorade. Retrieved 2008-11-22.
  2. ^ "Football Inventions That Shaped the Modern Game". 2007-09-06. Retrieved 2007-09-06.
  3. ^ a b "Gatorade 21. Stokeley'sResponse". ChemCases.com. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
  4. ^ "Inventor of the Week: Robert Cade". Massachusetts Institute of Technology. May 2004.
  5. ^ "National Football League".
  6. ^ "Major Baseball League".
  7. ^ "National Basketball Association".
  8. ^ "Women's National Basketball Association".
  9. ^ "USA Basketball".
  10. ^ "National Hockey League".
  11. ^ "Association of Volleyball Professionals".
  12. ^ "US Soccer Federation".
  13. ^ "Major League Soccer".
  14. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". gatorade.com. Gatorade. January 5, 2005. Retrieved 2007-05-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  15. ^ "Gatorade Thirst Quencher".
  16. ^ "Propel Fitness Water".
  17. ^ "Pepsi unveils low-calorie Gatorade 'G2'". money.cnn.com. CNN. September 7, 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-14. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  18. ^ "Gatorade Performance Series".
  19. ^ Ingredients label on Gatorade
  20. ^ http://www.missiong.com/
  21. ^ "The Gatorade Company". Business Week. 2008.
  22. ^ Elliott, Stuart (24 March 2009). "A Strategy When Times Are Tough: "It's New!"". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 March 2009. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  23. ^ "Gatorade Tiger, Thirst Quencher".
  24. ^ "Tiger endorsement firsts: U.S. beverage deal, licensing agreement". ESPN Golf. October 17, 2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  25. ^ a b "Gatorade FAQ". Retrieved 2009-01-15. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |source= ignored (help)
  26. ^ "How did the tradition of dumping Gatorade on football coaches begin?". Ask Yahoo!. Yahoo!. 2005-01-27. Retrieved 2007-05-16. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  27. ^ A more detailed account of the creation of the Be Like Mike campaign appears in Rovell, Darren (2006). First in thirst: how Gatorade turned the science of sweat into a cultural phenomenon. New York: American Management Association. OCLC 60393271.
  28. ^ Associated Press (2006-05-12). "Connecticut passes school soda ban: Designed to fight child obesity, law takes effect on July 1". MSNBC.com. Retrieved 2007-05-16. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  29. ^ The Waterboy (1998) - Memorable quotes
  30. ^ PepsiCo Sues Coca-Cola Over Powerade Advertisements - Bloomberg.com - April 13, 2009
  31. ^ Switchel Recipe Internet Cookbook Drink Cider Apple Beverage Molasses Honey Ginger
  32. ^ [1] [dead link]