Although I can find any amount of muscle on a woman attractive, it’s the big girls, the elite bodybuilders, that have always turned me on the most. A well-developed calf spotted in the street, a pole vaulter, a gymnast, a dancer, even a bikini competitor can get my juices flowing, but sooner or later I return to the prime female muscle beef. I am, after all, a self-confessed slave to female muscle, so it’s only logical that I should find the most muscular women sexier than any others.
Zuzana Korinkova and Fabiola Boulanger
From different eras but equally big (and hot)
People say that female bodybuilding is dying. In fact, people have been saying it for years. As long ago as 1999, ABC news in America made a report on its decline (watch it here). Commentators have often pointed at the post-Lenda Murray era for the start of the decline, some blaming Kim Chizevsky herself as being responsible for ‘the end of female bodybuilding’.
Kim Chizevsky
Wanted for the killing of female bodybuilding
The recently-introduced IFBB Physique class is supposed to be the latest nail in the coffin. Doomsayers claim there are fewer and fewer competitors in female bodybuilding, and the women who do compete are too big and too masculine to retain the level of appeal to the public that promoters need to generate the funds necessary for shows. Prize money is consequently negligible, and it is said the biggest women spend more on steroids than they could ever possibly hope to win back. In short, the picture has been bleak for some time and is getting bleaker.
Bev Francis (v Rachel McLish)
Who was the real star of the film for you?
But is the sport really in as bad a state as all that? There have always been women in the sport who have been criticised for their masculinity, remember Bev Francis in Pumping Iron II? Moreover, if female bodybuilding has been dying since circa 1996, surely it should be dead already. And if it really is in its death throes, why are new stars still emerging?
Yaxeni Oriquen
Miss International 2012, her fifth win in the competition
Cathy Le François and Debi Laszewski
Female bodybuilding legends still in top shape
Female Muscle Slave finds it hard to believe that female bodybuilding is dying when looking at the competitors at the most recent Miss International. Won by the peerless Yaxeni Oriquen, the field was, in my opinion, among the best ever to grace a bodybuilding stage. Apart from Yaxeni, who was possibly in her best ever shape, it was a truly international field with a wide variety of top-level experience. Cathy Le François seems to have been around for as long as I’ve been a fan, and Debi Laszewski seems to get bigger and better each year. More recently-established stars from the US like Monique Jones and Kim Perez rubbed their considerable shoulders with Alina Popa and Brigita Brezovac, their European counterparts.
Top: Monique Jones and Kim Perez
Bottom: Brigita Brezovac and Alina Popa
Surely one of them is a future Miss Olympia
The entire field was unapologetically big and ripped. There was South American freakishness from Maria Rita Bello, and Kim Buck in her best-ever showing as a pro. There was the gorgeous Tina Chandler making my heart go all a-flutter (and not just mine I’ll bet). There was the thickness of Mexico’s Maria Segura, and the feline sexuality of Canada’s Zoa Linsey.
From top, left to right: Maria Rita Bello, Kim Buck,
Tina Chandler, Maria Segura and Zoa Linsey
From Canada down to Argentina there's some serious female muscle in the Americas
And to top it all, Alevtina Goroshinskaya from Russia and the Chilean Geraldine Morgan provided proof that there is a younger generation of female bodybuilders who aspire to the kind of muscularity necessary to compete with the biggest girls of all. Can the sport really be dying when it can produce a line-up like this at one of its flagship shows?
Alevtina Goroshinkaya and Geraldine Morgan
The next wave of professional female muscle is here
It may well be true that in the future female bodybuilding will be forced to detach itself from bodybuilding and other female physique classes. Why hang around when you’re not wanted and not getting what you want? And if it is to develop separately from other physique sports, then it is the women, specifically the elder stateswomen of female bodybuilding, who should be stepping in and helping their successors. Female tennis players were responsible for setting up the Women’s Tennis Federation, and the sport has gone from strength to strength since. Why shouldn’t female bodybuilders do the same?
Serena Williams and Iris Kyle
Serena enjoys the rewards of a sport she and her peers control, Iris, though at the top of her sport for many years now, has little or no say in the way it is run.
But my ill-informed opinion on the future of the sport is not what this week is going to be about on Female Muscle Slave. What I’d like it to be is a celebration, a celebration of female bodybuilders. Not self-snapping amateurs, not physique competitors, but proper female bodybuilders. A celebration and a small but determined stand against those who have already buried female bodybuilding.
Too big for you? Too ‘man-like’? Then look away now.
This week on Female Muscle Slave we shall be gorging ourselves on the biggest and the best. This week, size matters.
Enjoy!
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