Friday, 10 August 2007

It Does A Body Good

If you've been reading this blog since June, you may recall that I was contacted by Gatorade, and wrote an article concerning Gatorade versus water. A lady by the name of Katherine Stewart has written me via email regarding the testing that Anaheim Ducks' goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere had been through at the Gatorade Sports Science Institute in order to help better his on-ice performance. My conclusion was that water, for me, is still a better choice than Gatorade due to the how Gatorade erodes teeth faster than other liquids and hydrates no better, or, in some cases, worse, than water.

I'm sorry to do this to you, Gatorade, but you've taken another hit, and this one is a big one.

According to an article published by the Globe and Mail today, Gatorade provides no real benefit to helping anyone lose weight or gain muscle after activity. Nutritionally, Gatorade offers no real benefit to active people, according to the study, when compared to milk. In fact, milk is a better choice for building muscles and losing weight.

The article was written by Andre Picard. It reads:

"Want to get the most from your workout?

Then ditch the Gatorade and reach instead for a tall, cool glass of milk.

That is the message emerging from a new Canadian study that found that exercisers who drink milk after a workout gain more muscle and lose more fat than those who consume sports drinks.

The reason, researchers believe, is that, in addition to liquid for hydration and carbohydrates for energy, milk is also rich in protein, while sports drinks contain little or no protein.

'The protein in milk is high-quality,' Stuart Phillips, an associate professor of kinesiology at McMaster University in Hamilton and lead author of the study, said in an interview.

'We also think the way milk proteins are digested by the body confers some benefits,' Dr. Phillips said prior research has demonstrated that what exercisers drink and eat in the one or two hours after a workout is crucial in determining muscle gain and fat loss.

The new study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, involved 56 men aged 18 to 30 who signed up for a rigorous five-day-a-week weightlifting program over a 12-week period.

The participants were randomly assigned to one of three groups, based on their recovery drink.

One group drank 500 millilitres (about two cups) of skim milk that contained 17.5 grams of protein, 25.7 grams of carbohydrates and 0.4 grams of fat. A second group received a soy drink with identical ratios of nutrients, while a third group got a sports drink.

All three beverages contained 735 calories and were flavoured identically with vanilla and served in opaque containers so participants did not know what exactly they were drinking.

Over the study period, all the young men gained muscle mass and most lost fat, but the milk drinkers came out ahead across the board.

For example, the milk-drinking group lost, on average, two pounds of fat each, compared with one pound each for those in the sports-drink group. The soy-beverage drinkers neither lost nor gained fat.

The milk drinkers also came out on top in muscle gain, adding, on average, 2.5 pounds more muscle than the soy-beverage drinkers and 3.3 pounds more than the sports-drink group. 'The practical results are obvious: If you want to gain muscle and lose weight as a result of working out, drink milk,' Dr. Phillips said."


Perhaps it is time for the NHL to ditch the high-carb, low-benefit sports drinks like Gatorade and Powerade after games, and start promoting the dairy farmers across North America. This study just goes to prove that milk does a body good. If NHL players are always looking for an edge, they should look no further than the dairy section at their local market.

To the NHL and NHLPA, I ask you "Got Milk?" If you don't, maybe it's time you did. It's not like both the dairy farmers and the NHL can't help each other with a little cross-promoting. Parents want to get kids off the sweets and garbage that are causing childhood obesity rates to sky-rocket. If their NHL heroes and icons start promoting milk and activity like hockey, you never know what may happen on this continent. We were always told to drink our milk - now, we have even more reason to drink it.

Until next time, keep your sticks on the ice!

6 comments:

  1. I would love to see some hockey players with milk mustaches!

    On another note...your body must be in a cool state for milk to not make you sick. If your body is warm or hot, the mild will curdle and you will proceed to remove the milk in a rather messy manner. Sports drinks and water do not have this requirement. I can certainly see how milk would be good after a workout once the body has cooled. Although, it would cause some issues for people who are lactose intolerant.

    Personally, I drink about a gallon and a half of skim milk per week. I love milk. There are so many good things it does for a body.

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  2. I am an avid milk drinker as well, Sage. I've never had a broken bone in my life either. Could the calcium in milk be a factor there?

    I agree that milk can curdle if you're overheated. However, I don't know if I'd promote it as a after-game drink where water or juice might be a better choice. Perhaps this is more of a post-workout drink.

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  3. I'm not a big Gatorade fan, but as far as I know, I don't think Gatorade has ever made the claim that it can help you lose weight and build muscle mass. They've always focused on the re-hydration aspects of the drink.

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  4. I agree, Jeff. However, since some people drink Gatorade at the gym or after they finish their workouts, they would be better off drinking milk for additional benefits.

    All I was alkuding to was the fact that milk would be a good post-workout drink, and a great way to get in touch with kids and their parents as a marketing tool.

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  5. If you really want a post-workout drink, skip plain milk and drink instead an isolated whey protein shake that includes carbohydrates. 20g of whey protein absorbs very quickly into the bloodstream, faster than the whey/casein mix in regular milk.

    Now, for the real question: how much is milk paying you to promote it over Gatorade?

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  6. Valid question, DLS.

    I have made zero dollars off this blog, and I don't plan to sell out to Gatorade, Powerade, or milk producers any time soon. I just think that too much emphasis is placed on sports drinks and energy drinks when performance ten years ago didn't really rely on what one drank.

    Water is still my recommended drink, but I do like a glass of cold milk. :o)

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