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View Full Version : Inventor of Gatorade dies at 80


luv
11-27-2007, 02:16 PM
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=3920465

By RON WORD Associated Press Writer
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Nov 27, 2007 (AP)

Dr. Robert Cade, who invented the sports drink Gatorade and launched a multibillion-dollar industry that the beverage continues to dominate, died Tuesday of kidney failure. He was 80.

His death was announced by the University of Florida, where he and other researchers created Gatorade in 1965 to help the school's football players replace carbohydrates and electrolytes lost through sweat while playing in swamp-like heat.

He asked, "Doctor, why don't football players wee-wee after a game?"

"That question changed our lives," Cade said.

Cade's researchers determined a football player could lose up to 18 pounds 90 to 95 percent of it water during the three hours it takes to play a game. Players sweated away sodium and chloride and lost plasma volume and blood volume.

Using their research, and about $43 in supplies, they concocted a brew for players to drink while playing football. The first batch was not exactly a hit.

"It sort of tasted like toilet bowl cleaner," said Dana Shires, one of the researchers.

"I guzzled it and I vomited," Cade said.

The researchers added some sugar and some lemon juice to improve the taste. It was first tested on freshmen because Coach Ray Graves didn't want to hurt the varsity team. Eventually, however, the use of the sports beverage spread to the Gators, who enjoyed a winning record and were known as a "second-half team" by outlasting opponents.

After the Gators beat Georgia Tech 27-12 in the Orange Bowl in 1967, Tech coach Bobby Dodd told reporters his team lost because, "We didn't have Gatorade ... that made the difference."

Stokely-Van Camp obtained the licensing rights for Gatorade and began marketing it as the "beverage of champions." PepsiCo Inc. now owns the brand, which has brought the university more than $110 million in royalties since 1973.

Cade said Stokely-Van Camp hated the name "Gatorade," believing it would was too parochial, but stuck with it after tests showed consumers liked the name.

Cade said he thought the use of Gatorade would be limited to sports teams and never dreamed it would be purchased by regular consumers.

"I never thought about the commercial market," he said. "The financial success of this stuff really surprised us."

The researcher also said he was proud that Gatorade was based on research into what the body loses in exercise. "The other sports drinks were created by marketing companies," he said.

Since its introduction, Cade said the formula changed very little. An artificial sweetener has replaced sugar.

Instead of the original four flavors, there are now more than 30 available in the United States and more than 50 flavors available internationally.

Born James Robert Cade in San Antonio on Sept. 26, 1927, Cade, a Navy veteran, graduated from the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas.

Cade was appointed an assistant professor in internal medicine at UF in 1961. He worked until he was 76, retiring in November 2004 from the university, where he taught medicine, saw patients and conducted research.

Cade and his wife, Mary, had six children.

DaKCMan AP
11-27-2007, 02:20 PM
Sad, but he's been ill for quite some time.

Just last week they commemorated Gatorade with the University's first historical marker.

Win Phillips, UF's vice president for research, said he's proud to be a part of the institution that created the world's most-recognized sports drink.

"Trojanade didn't happen. Buckeye juice didn't happen," Phillips said. "Gatorade happened."

http://www.alligator.org/articles/2007/11/19/news/campus/gatorade.txt

kepp
11-27-2007, 02:21 PM
He died from taste-testing the new "Antifreeze Fire!" flavor.

JBucc
11-27-2007, 02:22 PM
I remember when Powerade was the next big thing. But it just couldn't last like Gatorade has.

Demonpenz
11-27-2007, 02:25 PM
i don't play sports but that shit sure keeps me hydrated while I play madden

HemiEd
11-27-2007, 02:29 PM
HemiEd resisting any reference to grape flavor. :)

Braincase
11-27-2007, 02:31 PM
So, Gatorade causes kidney failure?

Eleazar
11-27-2007, 02:33 PM
Man, I love that stuff. I used to ride my bike to Casey's and buy it, back when it game in the glass bottles with the button that pops up after it's been unsealed.

And Citrus Cooler... I wish they still sold that in this part of the country. Best flavor ever.

mikeboogie
11-27-2007, 02:39 PM
I agree Citrus Cooler, Second to none!

gblowfish
11-27-2007, 03:04 PM
When I was in HS in the 70's I drank a tractor trailer full of that stuff.
Absolutely the best during summer football practice.