Just as the use of ultra-skinny 'size zero' models have been the talking point of London Fashion Week, there are also concerns within women's tennis about body image. Zina Garrison, a former Wimbledon finalist and a "recovering bulimic", suggested last night that the obsession with image could lead to players developing eating disorders.
For many years during her playing career, the American was far from being a health-eating athlete. Binging on junk food and then making herself throw it all up again became as much a part of her daily routine as picking up her rackets and hitting balls on the courts. She had never been comfortable with her looks, and her bulimia was brought on by her long-held belief that she was too heavy, and then the distress, when she was 19, of her mother's death.
Although Garrison went through therapy to treat her bulimia and she made the 1990 Wimbledon final, where she was beaten by Martina Navratilova, she relapsed after her retirement in 1996 and her self-loathing reached the point where she attempted suicide in 1999 by over-dosing on drugs. And so Garrison remains acutely aware of weight issues in tennis. "For a female athlete to be overweight," Garrison said, "now that's seen as the worst thing in the world."
During last month's Australian Open, Garrison became increasingly angry about how Serena Williams' body became a topic of debate. But, in recent years, Williams is plainly not the only women's tennis player to have endured a public inquiry about her looks, as there was also a controversy involving Slovakian Daniela Hantuchova, who was forced to deny allegations that she was anorexic.
With many female players promoted for their physical appearance as well as their racket skills, Garrison indicated that this could cause problems. "The attention on women's bodies in tennis definitely increases the chances of a player developing an eating disorder. There's already the pressure to do well in the sport, and then there's more pressure to look good on court, and then there's the pressure to look good for your sponsors, and in other pictures. That's tough," said Garrison, 43, the United States' Fed Cup captain.
"In tennis, as in all women's sport, there is a lot of talk about women's bodies. People are looking at your body the whole time. A male athlete is allowed to be overweight, that's no big deal. But for a female athlete to be overweight, now that's seen as the worst thing in the world.
"I know from my own experiences how tough it can be when people are discussing your weight. I was never a small person. There was attention on me about my weight, and I went through an eating disorder because of that. I suffered from bulimia for several years during my career. My mother died when I was young. My bulimia got really bad. I felt very empty."
Just two months ago, Dr Sheelagh Rodgers, a psychological consultant to the English Institute of Sport, argued that a growing number of British teenage athletes were developing eating disorders. She pointed to research which showed that nearly one-fifth of elite female athletes have had anorexia or bulimia, with tennis one of the worst affected sports.