Key Takeaways:
- Gatorade features Shedeur Sanders in its 60th anniversary campaign, focusing on his resilience as he prepares for the NFL Draft.
- Kendrick Lamar narrates the campaign's main commercial, the first time a musician has taken that role in Gatorade’s history.
- The brand revisits its “Is It In You?” platform, this time focusing on what athletes endure, not just what they win.
In a world chasing wins, Gatorade spotlighted the losses that shape champions.
The brand's “Lose More. Win More.” takes a different route than the highlight-heavy sports ads viewers usually expect.
The brand chose to highlight the pressure, setbacks, and quiet work athletes face when no one is watching.
Other stars featured in the campaign are Josh Allen, Caitlin Clark, Luka Doncic, Lamar Jackson, Jayson Tatum, and A’ja Wilson.
Kendrick Lamar also lent his voice to the hero spot, which premiered during the NBA Playoffs, but it’s Shedeur Sanders who gave the campaign its edge.
Sanders appeared in multiple campaign ads, including a standout solo commercial released just days before the NFL Draft.
In it, he delivers throws at a bullseye while calmly declaring, “I’m not afraid to lose.” The message lands harder when you consider his path.
Once a projected top draft pick, he now faces public doubts about his performance and leadership.
Long tied to Gatorade through NIL deals, Sanders now represents something bigger for the brand: how an athlete manages pressure, not just how they win games.
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Instead of avoiding the scrutiny he’s received, Gatorade lets that tension speak for itself.
Anuj Bhasin, Gatorade’s chief brand officer, explained in a LinkedIn post that the idea for the campaign came from real conversations with their athlete roster.
“Even the greatest in the world don’t back away from loss, they harness it to win,” Bhasin wrote.
He added that the creative work celebrates the persistence and mental toughness that often get overlooked in sports stars.
When athletes become co-creators in the storytelling process, the brand benefits from deeper engagement and more meaningful messaging that aligns with audience sentiment.
Back to Its Roots
This campaign also reconnects with the DNA of Gatorade’s past.
It draws on the spirit of its “Is It In You?” legacy but adapts it for today’s sports culture, where vulnerability, drive, and pressure are just as visible as victory laps.
Gatorade plans to run these ads throughout 2025 during major moments like the MLB All-Star Game.
As the brand celebrates six decades in sports, it’s making it clear which stories matter most.
It's not just the ones about finishing first, but the ones about getting back up.
Our Take: What Really Stays With You?
For me, it’s the hard parts. The stuff no one claps for. That’s what Gatorade got right.
I’ve seen plenty of ads that celebrate trophies and titles with massive crowds roaring in excitement.
This one stuck because it shows the hours no one talks about. The brand didn’t gloss over it or clean it up.
Gatorade's honesty feels like a risk, but it’s the kind more brands should be willing to take.
While Gatorade honors the grind, Pepsi spotlights football’s flair with its star-packed “Refresh the Game” campaign.