You know that feeling when you reach for a sports drink after a workout or on a scorching summer day, expecting that sweet burst of hydration, only to stare down a suspicious list of ingredients that reads like a chemistry experiment gone wrong? You’re not alone. For years, we’ve been handed plastic bottles filled with glorified sugar water, a splash of neon dye, and enough additives to make your head spin — and we just accepted it. But not anymore. Enter SPORT DRINK, a game-changer born from frustration, honesty, and a big ol’ refusal to play by the old rules.

What’s Wrong with Sports Drinks? Spoiler: Everything.
Let’s be real. If you’ve glanced at your usual hydration, go-to, chances are it’s packed with mysterious “natural flavors,” artificial dyes, stevia, monk fruit, citric acid, maltodextrin, and a laundry list of other ingredients you can barely pronounce. Some of them might even be okay in moderation, but when you’re loading your body after a workout, a game, or just the chaos of life, you want something that works without junk.
Classic brands have made hydration about marketing, not science. They slap on a fancy label, add some bright colors, toss in sugar and fillers, and call it a day. That’s why so many of us became skeptics — because if hydration feels like a lie, why bother?
The Birth of SPORT DRINK: No Gatekeepers, No BS
SPORT DRINK isn’t your typical corporate giant. This is a story about two guys—Josh Lekach and Josh Kaye—who got tired of sitting on the sidelines and watching the hydration industry spiral into a chemical mess. With just a small line of credit, zero investors (except a hockey goalie who knows the value of endurance), and an anonymous designer named “John Galt” (yes, like the Atlas Shrugged guy), they crafted a drink that respects your body and your intelligence.
No Yellow 5 Lemon Lime and Orange You Glad It’s Not Chemicals aren’t just flavors; they’re a manifesto. A statement against fake ingredients, cheap fillers, and the kind of corporate laziness that’s been the norm for far too long.

