Super Bowl 2026: Gatorade bath odds and history

Feb 4, 2026 - 15:45
Super Bowl 2026: Gatorade bath odds and history
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 9: Head coach Nick Sirianni of the Philadelphia Eagles is dunked with Gatorade by teammates during Super Bowl LIX against the Kansas City Chiefs at Caesars Superdome on February 09, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images) | Getty Images

One of the great traditions of the Super Bowl began, well, as payback.

During the 1984 season, the New York Giants and their head coach, Bill Parcells, were under a great deal of pressure. Parcells’ first season in New York was a disaster, as the Giants limped to a 3-12-1 record, and every newspaper in New York was pointing to Howard Schnellenberger as perhaps the Giants’ next head coach.

New York got off to a 3-4 start in 1984, but with a pivotal game coming up against the Atlanta Falcons, Parcells was particularly tough on his players, telling them that a loss that week was probably going to cost him his job.

While the Giants won that game to improve to 4-4, things got tougher after that with a matchup against NFC East rivals Washington. Parcells continued to ride his players, including one player in particular: Defensive tackle Jim Burt. Parcells kept reminding Burt — and anyone else within earshot during practice — that Washington center Rick Donnalley had won the NFL’s “Strongest Man in Pro Football” competition.

During practice that week, not only did Parcells put Burt up against double-team blocks after practice to simulate what the defensive tackle would be up against, he forced Burt to hold 20-pound dumbbells in each hand and punch a padded wall in the locker room for 45 minutes, to mimic firing his hands off the ball at the snap.

Burt endured that week of practice, but ahead of the game he told his coach in rather colorful language that while he handled the week, he hoped Parcells could handle what would follow next.

The Giants won that game 37-13, and in the closing moments Burt grabbed a Gatorade jug and dumped what was cold water on his head coach:

Yes, technically the first “Gatorade bath” was nothing but water.

But superstitions stick. After that first instance, Giants linebacker Harry Carson took over the duties and would dump the Gatorade tub on Parcells after each win. Carson said Parcells was superstitious, and so that continued all the way through their win over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXI.

And a new angle of betting was born.

What are the Gatorade odds for Super Bowl LX?

Now, fans can bet on the color of the Gatorade used at the end of the game, and Super Bowl LX is no different. According to FanDuel Canada, here are the odds for the color of the Gatorade at the end of Sunday’s game between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks:

ColorOdds
Orange+240
Yellow/Lime or Green+270
Blue+270
Purple+650
Water/Clear+1000
Red/Pink+1000

Super Bowl Gatorade shower color history

If you are wondering whether history could be a guide, here is every recorded color at the end of a Super Bowl used for the Gatorade Bath, dating back to Super Bowl XXXV between the Giants and the Baltimore Ravens:

Super BowlWinning TeamColor
59EaglesYellow/Green
58ChiefsPurple
57ChiefsPurple
56RamsBlue
55BuccaneersBlue
54ChiefsOrange
53PatriotsBlue
52EaglesYellow
51PatriotsNone
50BroncosOrange
49PatriotsBlue
48SeahawksOrange
47RavensNone
46GiantsPurple
45PackersOrange
44SaintsOrange
43SteelersYellow
42GiantsClear
41ColtsClear
40SteelersClear
39PatriotsClear
38PatriotsNone
37BuccaneersPurple
36PatriotsNone
35RavensYellow

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