Olympic Athlete Has The Perfect Response About BMI After Viewers Mock Her Weight
Ilona Maher, one of the biggest stars of the Olympic women’s rugby sevens competition, which kicked off Sunday (July 28) at the Stade de France, fired back at a comment on social media that attempted to fat-shame her. The athlete used her platform to debunk misconceptions perpetuated by the use of the body mass index (BMI).
Taking to her Instagram page on July 10, the 27-year-old American sportswoman, who just helped Team USA women’s rugby advance to their first Olympic semi-finals in Paris, responded to a comment that read: “I bet that person has a 30% BMI.”
- Ilona Maher used her platform to debunk misconceptions perpetuated by the use of the body mass index (BMI).
- Ilona responded to a comment fat-shaming her by revealing her BMI score and criticizing the measure's flaws.
- Ilona's body measurements indicate she has about 15% body fat, considered 'athletic' for women.
The BMI is a measure for adults to check what category their height and weight puts them in (underweight, healthy, or overweight), Patient.info explains.
The measure is calculated by dividing a person’s weight by the square of their height or BMI = weight/height2.
As per its official weight ranges, a BMI of 18.5 is considered underweight. Between 18.5 and 24.9, a person would be labeled as a healthy weight.
Ilona Maher is one of the biggest stars of the Olympic women’s rugby sevens competition
Image credits: ilonamaher
A BMI ranging between 25 and 29.9 would mean that a person is overweight, while a score over 30 would categorize a person as obese.
Nevertheless, the system has long been criticized among medical experts, as it does not take into account muscle mass, bone density, overall body composition, and racial and sex differences.
In a Reel posted on her Instagram page, which amassed over 11 million views, Ilona highlighted this exact problem, as she responded to the unpleasant comment: “I think you were trying to roast me, but it’s actually fact, I do have a BMI of 30. Well, 29.3.”
The Vermont, USA, native went on to reveal that she had been considered overweight her whole life, even feeling self-conscious in school, when during a routine medical examination, the healthcare professional had labeled her as “overweight” in her files.
Image credits: ilonamaher
“BMI doesn’t tell you much,” Ilona, who is among the most followed athletes on social media, said.
The rugby player explained that she is 5 foot 10 inches (around 178 centimeters), 200 pounds (around 91 kilograms), and has around 170 pounds (around 70 kilograms) of lean mass.
Her body measurements appear to equate to 15% body fat, which is considered in the “athletic” range for women, according to Healthline.
“BMI doesn’t tell you what I can do, what I do on the field, how much muscle I have,” Ilona argued.
The Olympic women’s rugby sevens competition kicked off at the Stade de France
View this post on Instagram
“But alas, I’m going to the Olympics, and you’re not,” she concluded.
A handful of people appreciate the athlete’s outspokenness on the issue, something she has been notable for, often taking a stand for body positivity.
“‘Do that math in your head… you probably can’t’ pronounced dead at the scene,” an Instagram user commented.
Sports Dietician Jessica Isaacs wrote: “@ilonamaher …every sports [registered nutrician]’s fave athlete on social media.”
Image credits: ilonamaher
Molly Bruggeman, who is rowing at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games for Team USA, penned: “Preach my queen. BMI ISN’T MADE FOR ATHLETES.”
“‘I’m going to the Olympics and you’re not’ ABSOLUTELY OBLITERATED THEY WILL NEVER RECOVER,” a netizen quipped.
Hungarian professional CrossFit athlete Laura Horváth shared: “Louder for the ppl in the back.”
American Olympic bobsledder Elana Meyers Taylor added: “Fellow overweight Olympian here! That high BMI has been the key to my Olympic success!”
Ilona fired back at a comment on social media that attempted to fat-shame her
Image credits: ilonamaher
A separate individual chimed in: “Imagine tryna fat shame an Olympic athlete.”
“There is an urgent need for accurate, practical and affordable tools to measure fat and skeletal muscle, and biomarkers that can better predict the risks of diseases and mortality,” Dr. Rexford Ahima, a professor of medicine and the director of the obesity unit at the Institute for Diabetes, said in a 2022 Medical News Today article.
He continued: “Advances to improve the measurement of obesity and related factors will help determine the optimal weight for an individual, taking into account factors such as age, sex, genetics, fitness, pre-existing diseases, as well novel blood markers and metabolic parameters altered by obesity.”
Dr. Mitchell Lazar, a professor of medicine and genetics and the director of the Institute of Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism, told Medical News Today: “Future research should be focused more on molecular pathways, especially how metabolic factors altered by obesity change the development of diabetes, heart diseases, cancer and other ailments, and influence the health status and mortality.”
Image credits: ilonamaher
Nick Trefethen, a professor of numerical analysis at Oxford University’s Mathematical Institute, told The Economist in 2013 that BMI leads to confusion and misinformation.
At the time, the professor said he believed that the BMI weight/height term divides the weight by too much in short people and too little in tall individuals.
According to Trefethen, this results in tall people believing they are fatter than they really are, and short people thinking they are thinner.
BMI was devised in the 1830s by Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet (1796-1874), a Belgian mathematician, sociologist, statistician, and astronomer, as per Medical News Today.
The athlete used her platform to debunk misconceptions perpetuated by the use of the body mass index (BMI)
View this post on Instagram
Trefethen explained that during Quetelet’s time, there were no calculators, computers, or electronic devices – which is probably why he opted for a super-simple system.
The Oxford professor consequently wondered why institutions today on both sides of the Atlantic continued using the same flawed BMI formula, saying: “Perhaps nobody wants to rock the boat.”
He believed a better calculation than the present weight/height2 for BMI would be weight/height2.5, explaining: “Certainly if you plot typical weights of people against their heights, the result comes out closer to height2.5 than height2.”
As discussed by Ilona, one of BMI’s biggest flaws is that it does not take into account the person’s body fat versus muscle (lean tissue) content.
Image credits: ilonamaher
Many healthy athletes would be considered overweight and even obese based on their BMIs, such as wrestler Steve Austin.
At the height of his career, Steve weighed 114 kilograms (252 pounds) and was 6 feet and 2 inches tall (around 188 centimeters). This meant that his BMI was at 32.4, classifying him as obese.
Muscle weighs more than fat because it is denser. Moreover, a cubic inch of muscle weighs more than a cubic inch of fat, Medical News Today explained.
Therefore, BMI will inevitably classify muscly, athletic people as fatter than they really are.
Taking to her Instagram page, the 27-year-old replied to a comment that read: “I bet that person has a 30% BMI”
View this post on Instagram
That calculation is probably right for the sedentary couch potato, but not for the athlete, the medicine-focused outlet explained.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in 2022 that BMI “is a fairly reliable indicator of body fatness for most people.”
Additionally, the National Institutes of Health shared in 2022: “A good way to decide if your weight is healthy for your height is to figure out your body mass index.”
“Perhaps they should consider revising their statements,” Medical News Today wrote.
“This woman is in peak Olympic physical condition,” a reader commented
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I don’t get the comment she doesn’t even LOOK heavy she actually looks absolutely wonderfully healthy.
Exactly! I looked at her, and was like, that's overweight??? Like she looks pretty damn lean to me
Load More Replies...The losers mocking her weight have probably never played a sport in their lives. They’re probably all sitting on their couches shoving crisps into their mouth holes while writing hate comments against a professional athlete. Pretty damn pathetic.
I'd pay money to watch her open field tackle every one of them. Being skin and bones does not translate well to a sport like rugby. If you don't have a good amount muscle the hits you take have a much higher chance of hurting you. Also, mass moves mass. Someone who is her size will run right through someone 45 lbs. (20kg) lighter.
Load More Replies...BMI measurements are only a very rough guide and should never be used on their own to determine whether or not someone is a healthy weight. The healthcare company I work for has actually stopped using BMI and we use a number of metrics such as; body fat %, lean tissue measurements, cholesterol levels, blood pressure and cardiovascular performance to get a much more accurate picture of how healthy someone is.
A friend had a similar problem. His BMI was above the 'acceptable' threshold for a certain job. But he even his muscles had muscles. The doctor who was doing the physical for the job asked him about his hobbies - rugby, circuit training, playing football, etc. She down right refused to BMI as he was so very obviously fit and healthy, and BMI doesn't take into consideration muscle mass. (He got the job,)
Reminds me of an athlete years ago who all the guys on social media were salivating over. Then one day she posted her weight and they immediately turned on her. She was a 6 foot tall professional athlete and they were calling her a fat pig.
She's perfectly fine for one, not even the least bit overweight. Second, her weight is her business. Why do people care? Just leave people alone.
My BMI is 2.5 lower than hers and I am chubby, she is not. It's total bullsh!t
I love Ilona!!! I literally watched Rugby for the first time because of her. Like that woman is a beast and I am here for it.
The screenshot with the comment saying „I bet she has a 30% bmi“ tells you all you need to know, when someone doesn’t even understand what Index means
Some people think that unless a woman looks like a skeleton with skin then she’s fat. When are we even going to get past glorifying eating disorders as beautiful? That’s what they like. A woman so skinny and weak she’s easy to overpower. Tell them the truth fellas. That’s why you like them skinny
1. Muscles are very heavy. 2. She is professional athlete. All these losers think they know better that the whole team of doctors, dietitians etc. who look after her?
An olympic athlete is built like a beautiful thunder goddess and people are shaming her for being fat? What a time to be alive
Good for her! A healthy response to nasty questions (and a bunch of envy). And speaking of envy, I really like that blue patchwork jacket she has on.
She plays rugby ffs; it makes sense that she would have a lot of muscle mass and weigh more. Goes to show how flawed the BMI thing is. A doctor praised my mom for losing weight and lowering her BMI, but she had cancer. Also the lovers winning about her are probably more out of shape than me.
She looks strong and healthy. BMI is an ok guideline for the average person but not for athletes. Muscle weighs more than fat. It's that simple. It's a guideline for the rest of us, it's not perfect, and anyone trying to body shame this powerful athlete should just shut it. Cuz as she said, "I'm at the Olympics and you're not"
What on earth are these beeyatchers, beeching about She looks amazing! Bunch of jealous losers.
All that designer clothes business made this shít happen, when some Joe-from-Idaho is trying to roast a pro athelete, or anybody else, because it's not 45 kg for a 175 cm. I never ever buy any designer clothes! Not because I can't afford them, but 1. for this very reason spreading an anorexia-body-type as "normal". 2. They are mostly ugly (especially Gucci), and not practical. 3. Their quality is shít, compared to a fast fashion-brand cotton and cashmere clothes for quarter price. 4. They should pay me to wear their f.cking logo.
According to BMI, Arnold was 'morbidly obese' when he won Mr Olympia.
OMG, she's gorgeous, strong and looks to be in pretty damned great shape to me! Tell her any of that stuff to her face and watch her kick the living $hit out of them!
That woman is FIT. Insecure haters are always going to find something to bully others about.
She and her team now have a first-ever bronze medal for the US. Kudos.
I have a friend who weighs around twenty stone, he's about 5'10" and bench presses 250kg. According to BMI he was clinically obese, but he was incredibly fit, not an ounce of fat on him, all muscle. I was about 5'9" and weighed around 10.5 stone, a cyclist and until my 50s my BMI was around 21. No way I could lift 250kg, but I could cycle all day with my pulse around 150bpm. So, no BMI is not terribly realistic when it comes to certain kinds of athletes. Good for her!
BMI is absolute garbage. I'm 6'2" and 190 pounds, almost all of which is muscle. Yet according to BMI charts, my doctor says I'm overweight and I need to lose ten pounds. From where? My actual body fat is already so low that if I go swimming I have almost no buoyancy.
BMI?! What does the BMI have to do with anything concerning actual athletes? All you need to do is look at the dozens of different body types depending on the discipline/type of sport? Are all the shot putters at the Olympics "fat" because a body builder's body type with a sixpack would be absolutely useless to them? Should a rhythmic gymnast "eat a sandwich" to fit the BMI? Some people need to STFU. Also: Rugby is literally soccer without the kid gloves. For this sport you want a body that can actually take a hit without keeling over.
An OLYMPIC LEVEL RUGBY PLAYER is not going to be hurt by your sad little insults, bro.
I am scrawny and bony and hafta wear clothes for kids because adult clothes are ginormous on me, and I have a BMI that says I’m obese. (But I absolutely have more fat on me than muscle!) Has the BMI truly never been adjusted to take into account the fact that people grow over time? Danes are ridiculously tall these days, and Americans have grown horizontally, just to name two examples. Are we really using the ZACT same index from the 1700s? That strikes me as absurd! 🤯
I don’t get the comment she doesn’t even LOOK heavy she actually looks absolutely wonderfully healthy.
Exactly! I looked at her, and was like, that's overweight??? Like she looks pretty damn lean to me
Load More Replies...The losers mocking her weight have probably never played a sport in their lives. They’re probably all sitting on their couches shoving crisps into their mouth holes while writing hate comments against a professional athlete. Pretty damn pathetic.
I'd pay money to watch her open field tackle every one of them. Being skin and bones does not translate well to a sport like rugby. If you don't have a good amount muscle the hits you take have a much higher chance of hurting you. Also, mass moves mass. Someone who is her size will run right through someone 45 lbs. (20kg) lighter.
Load More Replies...BMI measurements are only a very rough guide and should never be used on their own to determine whether or not someone is a healthy weight. The healthcare company I work for has actually stopped using BMI and we use a number of metrics such as; body fat %, lean tissue measurements, cholesterol levels, blood pressure and cardiovascular performance to get a much more accurate picture of how healthy someone is.
A friend had a similar problem. His BMI was above the 'acceptable' threshold for a certain job. But he even his muscles had muscles. The doctor who was doing the physical for the job asked him about his hobbies - rugby, circuit training, playing football, etc. She down right refused to BMI as he was so very obviously fit and healthy, and BMI doesn't take into consideration muscle mass. (He got the job,)
Reminds me of an athlete years ago who all the guys on social media were salivating over. Then one day she posted her weight and they immediately turned on her. She was a 6 foot tall professional athlete and they were calling her a fat pig.
She's perfectly fine for one, not even the least bit overweight. Second, her weight is her business. Why do people care? Just leave people alone.
My BMI is 2.5 lower than hers and I am chubby, she is not. It's total bullsh!t
I love Ilona!!! I literally watched Rugby for the first time because of her. Like that woman is a beast and I am here for it.
The screenshot with the comment saying „I bet she has a 30% bmi“ tells you all you need to know, when someone doesn’t even understand what Index means
Some people think that unless a woman looks like a skeleton with skin then she’s fat. When are we even going to get past glorifying eating disorders as beautiful? That’s what they like. A woman so skinny and weak she’s easy to overpower. Tell them the truth fellas. That’s why you like them skinny
1. Muscles are very heavy. 2. She is professional athlete. All these losers think they know better that the whole team of doctors, dietitians etc. who look after her?
An olympic athlete is built like a beautiful thunder goddess and people are shaming her for being fat? What a time to be alive
Good for her! A healthy response to nasty questions (and a bunch of envy). And speaking of envy, I really like that blue patchwork jacket she has on.
She plays rugby ffs; it makes sense that she would have a lot of muscle mass and weigh more. Goes to show how flawed the BMI thing is. A doctor praised my mom for losing weight and lowering her BMI, but she had cancer. Also the lovers winning about her are probably more out of shape than me.
She looks strong and healthy. BMI is an ok guideline for the average person but not for athletes. Muscle weighs more than fat. It's that simple. It's a guideline for the rest of us, it's not perfect, and anyone trying to body shame this powerful athlete should just shut it. Cuz as she said, "I'm at the Olympics and you're not"
What on earth are these beeyatchers, beeching about She looks amazing! Bunch of jealous losers.
All that designer clothes business made this shít happen, when some Joe-from-Idaho is trying to roast a pro athelete, or anybody else, because it's not 45 kg for a 175 cm. I never ever buy any designer clothes! Not because I can't afford them, but 1. for this very reason spreading an anorexia-body-type as "normal". 2. They are mostly ugly (especially Gucci), and not practical. 3. Their quality is shít, compared to a fast fashion-brand cotton and cashmere clothes for quarter price. 4. They should pay me to wear their f.cking logo.
According to BMI, Arnold was 'morbidly obese' when he won Mr Olympia.
OMG, she's gorgeous, strong and looks to be in pretty damned great shape to me! Tell her any of that stuff to her face and watch her kick the living $hit out of them!
That woman is FIT. Insecure haters are always going to find something to bully others about.
She and her team now have a first-ever bronze medal for the US. Kudos.
I have a friend who weighs around twenty stone, he's about 5'10" and bench presses 250kg. According to BMI he was clinically obese, but he was incredibly fit, not an ounce of fat on him, all muscle. I was about 5'9" and weighed around 10.5 stone, a cyclist and until my 50s my BMI was around 21. No way I could lift 250kg, but I could cycle all day with my pulse around 150bpm. So, no BMI is not terribly realistic when it comes to certain kinds of athletes. Good for her!
BMI is absolute garbage. I'm 6'2" and 190 pounds, almost all of which is muscle. Yet according to BMI charts, my doctor says I'm overweight and I need to lose ten pounds. From where? My actual body fat is already so low that if I go swimming I have almost no buoyancy.
BMI?! What does the BMI have to do with anything concerning actual athletes? All you need to do is look at the dozens of different body types depending on the discipline/type of sport? Are all the shot putters at the Olympics "fat" because a body builder's body type with a sixpack would be absolutely useless to them? Should a rhythmic gymnast "eat a sandwich" to fit the BMI? Some people need to STFU. Also: Rugby is literally soccer without the kid gloves. For this sport you want a body that can actually take a hit without keeling over.
An OLYMPIC LEVEL RUGBY PLAYER is not going to be hurt by your sad little insults, bro.
I am scrawny and bony and hafta wear clothes for kids because adult clothes are ginormous on me, and I have a BMI that says I’m obese. (But I absolutely have more fat on me than muscle!) Has the BMI truly never been adjusted to take into account the fact that people grow over time? Danes are ridiculously tall these days, and Americans have grown horizontally, just to name two examples. Are we really using the ZACT same index from the 1700s? That strikes me as absurd! 🤯
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