Montreal Gazette

SUPER BOWL HERO TOM BRADY EATS DANGEROUSL­Y

IF YOU THINK IT’S HIS CRAZY DIET, THINK AGAIN

- SHARON KIRKEY

Aloyal Patriots fan, Timothy Caulfield recently confessed in Policy Options Magazine that, should the seriously “dreamy” Tom Brady ever need a kidney, “I’m there for him.”

But not even Brady’s epic Super Bowl win is enough to make Caulfield question whether he’s been wrong all along about the quarterbac­k’s freakishly restricted diet, certain elements of which, writes Caulfield, holder of the University of Alberta’s Canada research chair in health law and policy, “register as full-out kook.”

Brady and his supermodel wife Gisele Bündchen reportedly follow an 80 per cent alkaline, 20 per cent acidic diet — a meal plan the NFL quarterbac­k famously told Sports Illustrate­d in 2014 provides “balance and harmony through my metabolic system.”

Brady shuns white sugar, white flour, nightshade vegetables (tomatoes, eggplant, mushrooms), most fruits (“I’ve never eaten a strawberry in my life,” he told New York magazine last year), caffeine, MSG, iodized salt (pink Himalayan only) and dairy.

He does enjoy avocado-based ice cream.

The ageless wonder quarterbac­k credits his insanely discipline­d diet for his success and, at 39, says he has no plans to retire (“Too bad babe,” he reportedly told Bündchen when she asked him to hang up his jersey after the Patriots’ stunning comeback Sunday. “I’m having too much fun.”)

But is there any science to support his austere eating plan?

“He’s such a good example of an anecdote overwhelmi­ng the data,” Caulfield says. “And the media usually give him the ‘you can’t argue with success’ treatment.”

Parts of Brady’s diet are undoubtedl­y healthy, Caulfield allows. He’s eating more “real” food. He avoids junk food. All good, he says.

“But what often happens with these fad diets is, a little bit of good is wrapped in a blanket of pseudo-science, and the whole package is sold even though there’s no data to support it.”

Brady appears to subscribe to an alkaline diet popularize­d by Robert O. Young, author of The pH Miracle book series. Young is an American naturopath now facing three years and eight months in a California jail for practising medicine without a licence. According to the BBC, he bought his PhD from a diploma mill.

The alkaline view is based on the (scientific­ally discredite­d) theory that people need to consume a diet high in alkaline foods in order to maintain the pH of the blood. If blood becomes too acidic, the hypothesis holds, the body starts leaching calcium and other minerals from the bones, muscles and major organs, and bad things start to happen.

Dr. Rena Mendelson begs to differ. Our bodies naturally control our pH levels, says Mendelson, a professor in the school of nutrition at Ryerson University in Toronto.

“It’s not something we even need to be conscious of, because our normal homeostati­c mechanisms allow us to adapt to a range of different foods or fluids or whatever it is we consume,” she says. “How would the rest of us be walking around and performing well in our day-to-day life if we had to pay attention to the acidity or alkalinity of the foods we consume?”

There’s nothing wrong with a diet that’s high in vegetables and whole grains. Eliminatin­g any one food also isn’t a problem, Mendelson says. Strawberri­es aren’t essential to diet. Neither are tomatoes. But tossing out an entire food group — nightshade­s, for example — can be problemati­c. Nightshade­s are high in nutrients, high in the proven Mediterran­ean diet and are anti-inflammato­ry, says Calgary University registered dietitian and epidemiolo­gist Tanis Fenton.

We don’t need pure sugar. But neither do we need to cut out fruit because it has sugar, she says.

Last year, Fenton published a systematic review of the associatio­n between diet acidic load and cancer. Her conclusion: “Almost no actual research” exists to prove or disprove these diets for cancer prevention or treatment.

Brady is a phenomenal athlete, Fenton says, “and he very modestly is suggesting his diet is the reason, but, no. That’s not good evidence, because it’s a case study — it’s one individual, and an individual endowed with a wonderful genetic predisposi­tion to be an athlete, obviously. Because diet alone doesn’t make us phenomenal athletes like him.”

Still, Caulfield’s research has shown people subscribe to celebritie­s over any other source of authority. Celebrity trumps everything.

Brady isn’t alone: Think of swimmer Michael Phelps’ embrace of “cupping” at the Rio games, and super-cold cryotherap­y devotee LeBron James. There’s a sociologic­al phenomenon that suggests we can’t help, consciousl­y or not, being influenced by celebritie­s, Caulfield says.

“We’re all comparison machines — we can’t help but compare ourselves to others. For most of human history that was a pretty small cohort. Now it’s people like Tom Brady. They have such a huge cultural footprint — they own social media, they own popular culture. We can’t help but hear the things they talk about.”

But he worries the pseudo-science noise complicate­s the story about how to live a healthy lifestyle.

“It makes it sound like eating healthy is hard and expensive. People will go, ‘If I had Tom Brady’s personal chef I would eat healthy, too.’ And that’s a terrible message,” he says.

“Eating healthy doesn’t have to be complicate­d.”

HE’S SUCH A GOOD EXAMPLE OF AN ANECDOTE OVERWHELMI­NG THE DATA.

 ??  ??
 ?? MICHAEL J. IVINS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Research has shown people are more likely to listen to a celebrity like Tom Brady’s diet advice than they are to a doctor’s, especially after the ageless wonder captured his fifth Super Bowl on Sunday.
MICHAEL J. IVINS / GETTY IMAGES Research has shown people are more likely to listen to a celebrity like Tom Brady’s diet advice than they are to a doctor’s, especially after the ageless wonder captured his fifth Super Bowl on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada