Snow and ice may be dominating the weather report, but January is also a great time for another very specific type of precipitation: the Gatorade shower. With the college bowl season winding down tonight and the NFL playoffs heating up this weekend, get ready to see some coaches covered in sports drink. Here are the answers to some burning questions about this fairly new tradition.
Although the exact origins of the tradition are hotly debated, former New York Giants defensive tackle Jim Burt often gets the credit for the first bath. According to Darren Rovell’s interesting book First in Thirst: How Gatorade Turned the Science of Sweat into a Cultural Phenomenon, Burt had the idea for the prank while the Giants were struggling during the 1985 season. Head coach Bill Parcells had been riding Burt pretty hard before a midseason game against the Washington Redskins, and after the Giants emerged from that game with a 17-3 win, Burt playfully dumped a cooler full of Gatorade on the Big Tuna.
Linebacker Harry Carson, a favorite of Parcells, took the baths to the next level. While Burt eventually decided the dousing had lost its originality, Carson kept it up, showering Parcells with Gatorade after each of the Giants’ wins en route to their Super Bowl championship during the 1986 season.
However, while Burt and Carson popularized the Gatorade shower, they didn’t pull off the first dunking. That honor goes to former Chicago Bears lineman Dan Hampton, who collaborated with teammates Steve McMichael and Mike Singletary to get coach Mike Ditka wet after a regular-season win over the Vikings in 1984.

When the Giants made their trip to the White House in early 1987 to celebrate their Super Bowl victory, Carson brought the tradition with him. His target: none other than Ronald Reagan. Of course, it would have been a crime to mar Reagan’s fastidiously styled hair with sports drink, so Carson showered the president with a Gatorade cooler full of popcorn. Carson later wrote on his website, “How many people can say they did that to the President with Secret Service agents standing near with guns under their jackets?”
How could any company be irked by such great free advertising? When Gatorade’s head of sports marketing, Bill Schmidt, heard John Madden describing the Gatorade shower to millions of viewers during a Giants-49ers playoff game, he said, “I think I’ve died and gone to heaven.”

According to Rovell, since Gatorade didn’t actually think of the ritual, they weren’t quite sure how to handle the situation. To show the brand’s gratitude to the coach and his linebacker, Gatorade sent both men $1,000 Brooks Brothers gift certificates, along with a note from Schmidt. (“We do feel somewhat responsible for your cleaning bill,” he wrote.)
After the G-Men won the Super Bowl, though, a more formal endorsement seemed like a good idea. Parcells got a $120,000 deal for a three-year deal, and Carson picked up $20,000 of his own.
Of course. Legendary Miami Dolphins head coach Don Shula wanted no part of a Gatorade shower and ordered his players not to douse him.
Possibly. In November 1990, 72-year-old former Redskins and Rams coach George Allen led Long Beach State to a season-ending victory over UNLV, and his players rewarded him with a dunk from the cooler. Dousing a septuagenarian with cold liquid is a questionable move even in a temperate climate, and the drenching did quite a number on Allen’s body. He died of ventricular fibrillation on December 31, 1990; just one week earlier, he had commented in an interview that his health had never really returned following the bath.
Don’t blame Allen’s death on Gatorade, though. According to Allen, the team “couldn’t afford Gatorade,” so the possibly deadly liquid barrage was regular old ice water.
It wasn’t deadly, but the Gatorade shower Kentucky coach Guy Morriss received in the waning moments of the Wildcats’ 2002 game against LSU was pretty embarrassing. With just seconds left to play in the game, Kentucky looked like a lock to pull off a major upset over the Tigers, so Morriss’ players doused the coach with Gatorade.
Unfortunately for Morriss and Big Blue Nation, there’s a difference between looking like a lock to win and actually winning. LSU wideout Devery Henderson quickly scored a miracle touchdown on a tipped Hail Mary play, and Morriss was left standing on the sidelines, drenched and disappointed.
Sure it has. When the Boston Celtics captured the 2008 NBA title to end a 22-year drought, Finals MVP Paul Pierce doused coach Doc Rivers with a cooler full of red Gatorade. Reporters speculated that this might have been the first time the Gatorade shower had crossed over to the NBA.
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I just wish that Gatorade and other companies did not plaster their names over every little piece of plastic or wood or metal in a stadium just to get their names out there. The corporate johns that play the naming rights game are despicable (mind you, so are the companies that sell the rights in the first place).
I have my own boycott of companies that do this. So no gatorade for me. No motorola phone (see the headsets in the nfl). No nokia cell phone (when they used to be the sugar bowl). You get the idea. And of course the announcers in the game they have no shame either. But the biggest baddie is the NCAA since a college player can’t make any money and play on a team, but yet during a bowl game, they play in a corporate john stadium and wear a corporate john patch (sometimes it’s the same company – I’m looking at you fedex).
posted by Stephen - NYC on 1-7-2010 at 12:15 am
Way, way overused.
posted by Doug on 1-7-2010 at 8:57 am
My favorite gatorade bath has to be after the 1997 Sugar Bowl. The Florida Gators were about to win their 1st national title, and Spurrier knew the bath was coming so he put on a hat and a jacket. His reaction wasn’t as great as some of the surprises, but his foresight was hilarious.
posted by Tamahome Jenkins on 1-7-2010 at 9:30 am
Mmm, as a proud LSU alum, thanks, Mental_Floss, for making my morning with that clip from the Blue Grass Miracle. I am very pleased :)
Also, Geaux Longhorns! Down with Nick Saban and Bama!
posted by Lindsey on 1-7-2010 at 10:47 am
I went to University of Georgia, bitter rivals of the Gators and I know that our team drinks Powerade instead (plus, the state of Georgia is pretty much owned by Powerade’s parent company Coca-Cola). It still annoys me when the announcers still say “Gatorade bath”. And in our upset win against GA Tech this year, our coach was NOT happy with his bath because there was still some time on the clock where a Hail Mary could’ve happened. I’m glad we didn’t have the Kentucky embarrassment though. In one of their better plays of the season, the UGA players decided to bypass the head couch and instead douse the offensive coordinator at the end of the bowl game.
posted by catherine ann on 1-7-2010 at 10:54 am
I always thought it was hilarious when the players “miss.” You know, getting the coach on the back or around the neck. Come on guys, you’re 200- 300lbs of solid muscle and all you have to do is lift the cooler up and hit your mark. Is it so hard to get the coach on the head? Kinda ruins the Gatorade bath for the tv viewer when the coach only gets a wet torso.
posted by BorgQueen on 1-7-2010 at 12:19 pm
I was actually at the game where George Allen was “showered”…I was on the homecoming court. What many don’t know is that it rained all day, and was frigid cold…so he was already cold wet by the time he was doused with Gatorade.
After that, CSULB lost its football team.
posted by kcz on 1-7-2010 at 12:55 pm
Hook ‘Em Horns!
posted by izzi on 1-7-2010 at 1:07 pm
I remember seeing John Madden use the telestrator to diagram a replay of a coach getting doused – it was brilliant.
posted by PartiallyDeflected on 1-7-2010 at 1:22 pm
Stephen
Why? Do you just not like reading the ads?
little more explanation might make your boycott a little more succesful
posted by teo on 1-7-2010 at 5:10 pm
@catherine ann: Go Dawgs!
posted by Lynley on 1-7-2010 at 11:37 pm
Just another reason, sports people, of why I will never understand you. If someone poured a barrel of gatorade on me they’d get their jaw broken. But somehow it’s been turned into a tradition.
CAPTCHA: Fundamental Overstep.
posted by JitterBugs on 1-8-2010 at 11:12 am
@ Jitterbugs
If you dont like sports Im gonna venture to guess that you cant fight, so how would you break someones jaw?
posted by CJ on 1-10-2010 at 12:55 pm
My favorite Gatorade bath moments were (1) pouring the liquid over the head of the coach and then the bucket accidently slipping out of the pranksters’ hands and bonking the coach on the head. Gotcha!
(2) The (i think it was) Giantss player who, talking to the coach, would suddenly act like someone was sneaking up behind the coach to shower him, the coach ducking scared… only to find no one was there. Funny.
posted by joeb on 1-10-2010 at 6:31 pm
ESPN did a story showing that the Bears were the first to shower a coach (Ditka) with Gatorade in 1984.
posted by SouthstanderRSM on 11-25-2011 at 10:07 pm