Fara Williams looks on during an England Women's training session at St Georges Park.
Fara Williams is England's most capped player with 172 caps

During her career, Fara Williams was concerned about a culture of eating disorders in women's football.

Williams said players were shamed if their body fat percentage was too high.

She played for a number of WSL clubs.

Williams thought there was an issue with women's football.

I don't think it's right to call something a fat club.

A recent confidential study exploring mental health issues among women footballers in the top two tiers of the English game reported that 36% of the 115 players who competed displayed symptoms of an eating disorder.

Williams is an experienced player in the international set-up. I was there for a long time.

You felt as though you couldn't eat certain foods because you were being watched, but I like food and I like to eat.

"We don't know about the foods we're supposed to have," she said.

It's great now wearing your own fitted kit, but you have to look a certain way to fit into it.

You could hide a lot under the baggier kit. You can see a lot when they are fitted.

When you see a lot of these players, you can see that they're not eating well.

If you aren't under a certain body percentage, you go into fat club.

I was always concerned. I wasn't in a club for fat people. I wouldn't play the game and wouldn't leave.

In the Women's Super League, it was a term that was often used. You go into a fat club.

Matt Lawson is a coach and dietitian who has worked closely with the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) to help players learn how to meet their nutritional needs.

Football players have seen a rise in football-related eating disorders over the last 20 years, according to a report.

There is a misconception that men are more affected by eating disorders than women, but that is not true.

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