Report: Red Bull Doesn't Do Shit
You can spot Red Bull in the hands and on the heads of plenty of extreme sports athletes, but like most products that claim performance-enhancing benefits, a hat is just a hat and a drink is just a drink.
Researchers from Manipal University in India dosed 10 students with Red Bull and 10 students with a placebo an hour before exercise. The students had their maximum isometric force (MVC) recorded and then held an isometric contraction at 75% of MVC until failure.
You guessed it. No difference.
"The Red Bull energy drink (caffeine at 2mg/kg body weight) was no better than (control drink) at significant delaying effect on fatigue during isometric contraction," the study concluded.
That's not to say that caffeine, the most noteworthy ingredient in Red Bull besides sugar, doesn't have performance-enhancing benefits. But those benefits occur in endurance sports, which have yet to embrace flat-billed hats.
Related
Everything to Know About the 2025 NBA Cup Quarterfinals
Next Big Stars in WWE: Watch These 2026 Breakout Stars
The AFC Is Wide Open Heading Into Week 15
Kansas City Chiefs Need Offensive Changes This Offseason
- Eagles vs Chargers Monday Night Football Betting Prediction: Week 14 Bet Picks
- NBA Best Bets Today: Sunday Dec. 7th Top NBA Picks
- Texans vs Chiefs Sunday Night Football Betting Prediction: Week 14 Bet Picks
- Top 10 NFL Player Props for Week 14: Best Bets and Expert Picks
- College Football Conference Championship Best Betting Picks, Predictions
- UFC 323 Betting Picks: Best Bets for the Final ESPN Pay-Per-View
- NBA Best Bets Today: Top Betting Predictions for Friday Dec. 5th

