Tennis players criticised for their outrageous dressing sense on court
September 1st, 2010 - 4:21 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )
New York, Sept 1 (ANI): Tennis players have come under fire for the outrageous clothes they wear while on court.
Venus Williams’ black, satiny corset-style dress, accented with faux leather fringe, at the US Open in Flushing Meadows on August 31 had people asking if tennis fashion has gone too far.
In January she debuted nude underwear at the Australian Open, peeking out from under a neon yellow dress, and at the French Open, she looked like a cocktail waitress in a black lacy number with red piping, and the famous flesh-coloured panties.
The controversial ensemble shocked the world, and one commenter gave a blunt response to a USA Today poll, saying she was a total inspiration, but unfortunately, the inspiration was from Victoria’s Secret.
“I haven’t been a fan of Venus’ outfits lately,” the New York Post quoted David Rosenberg, a tennis fashion historian and the photo editor of Tennis magazine, as saying.
“They’re really costume-y, really gimmicky. I don’t think she looks her best. They could be more sophisticated,” he stated.
Maria Sharapova also came under the scanner after she wore a blue dress under a see-through nightie at the Australian Open in January.
“As much as I hate Sharapova being upset in the first round, I’m relieved that her dress is out of the tournament,” wrote one commenter on the tennis blog Busted Racquet.
Top seed Rafael Nadal and second-ranked Roger Federer were noticed for the unusual shades of pink they wore at tournaments in Toronto and Cincinnati this month.
Federer went with a rose “tuxedo” shirt, while Nadal chose a fluorescent salmon top with matching headband.
And rising star Bethanie Mattek-Sands regularly dons sequined and gold lame headbands, toga shirts, leopard prints and knee socks, and was even fined 1,000 dollars at the 2005 US Open for wearing a cowboy hat.
The players’ constant on-court flamboyance has left many tennis fans fondly recalling the days when all white was the norm.
“I prefer looking at the players in all-white at Wimbledon. I personally think no one looks as good as they did in the ’70s with the white Polo shirt and the tennis shorts,” W magazine editor and avid tennis fan Armand Limnander said. (ANI)
- Lady Gaga's meat dress tops Time's fashion statement list - Dec 16, 2010
- Maria Sharapova unveils 2011 Australian Open outfit - Jan 13, 2011
- Venus Williams' dresses making 'fireworks' at US open - Sep 06, 2010
- Maria Sharapova Beats Venus Williams At Hua Hin - Jan 02, 2010
- Yuki terrific, but needs to be aggressive: Bollettieri - Jul 12, 2010
- Venus Williams turns heads at US Open with latest tennis outfit choice - Sep 05, 2010
- Sharapova and Serena pull out of China Open - Sep 30, 2011
- All eyes on Sharapova's sparkly rock as she launches tennis web TV show - Mar 22, 2011
- Venus Williams pulls out of China Open due to knee injury - Oct 02, 2010
- Guess who all made it to 2010's fashion faux pas list? - Dec 27, 2010
- "Svelte and pretty" take over groundstrokes in women's tennis - Jan 24, 2010
- Murray thought someone was giving birth when Venus Williams was playing - Jan 20, 2011
- Venus Williams stuns audience with skin-coloured shorts - May 25, 2010
- Venus Williams' French Open Outfit Triggers Controversy - May 25, 2010
- Nadal bares all for Emporio Armani - Jan 22, 2011
Tags: australian open, bethanie mattek, cocktail waitress, david rosenberg, fashion historian, flamboyance, knee socks, maria sharapova, new york post, nightie, rafael nadal, roger federer, style dress, tennis fans, tennis fashion, tennis magazine, tuxedo shirt, usa today, victoria s secret, yellow dress