

mbg Beauty Director
mbg Beauty Director
Alexandra Engler is the beauty director at mindbodygreen and host of the beauty podcast Clean Beauty School. Previously, she’s held beauty roles at Harper’s Bazaar, Marie Claire, SELF, and Cosmopolitan; her byline has appeared in Esquire, Sports Illustrated, and Allure.com.

July 01, 2024
We love celebrating women on top of their game. In our new series Game On, we’re interviewing top athletes about their well-being routines—covering everything from nutrition that makes them feel strong to the moments that bring them joy.
If you’ve come across 27-year-old Team USA Rugby star Ilona Maher‘s TikTok videos, you know how charming she can be. Considering her page has over 1.1 million followers and 87.7 million likes, there’s a good chance you’ve come across a video or two if you’re on the platform. In fact, when I shared that I’d recently interviewed Maher to a friend, she gushed: I love her TikToks.
“If you want to make a career out of rugby or if you want to make enough money as a professional athlete in rugby, you have to have a social media presence. I treat it as a second job, if not right up there with my first job of being an athlete. Because at the spot we are as a sport and a women’s sport, I’m not going to get too much of a livable income with just rugby,” she told me about why she’s made social media a priority.
The rugby center’s exploding popularity may be thanks to her social media prowess, but make no mistake: Her strength will take center stage during this year’s Olympic Games in Paris. As she gears up for her second Olympics, I was able to chat with her about how she stays strong, what fuels her, and why she wears lipstick on the field.
mindbodygreen: What meals make you feel strongest?
Ilona Maher: I don’t feel bad about eating. I’ve been training my mind and training myself to [get to that mindset]. Even being a professional athlete—but I think all women experience this—we deal with eating and our bodies. For me, it’s been really freeing to learn what foods it takes to be at my top performance. The meals feel good when I know I need this food to fuel myself.
I’m more about function versus form. Because right now I’m supposed to be big. I’m supposed to be powerful. And I’m using these meals to do it.
But my favorite meals have to be the ones that my mom makes. It’s homey. It’s what I grew up on. It’s what kind of made me into the athlete I am today.
She can cook a steak like no one else, and she makes this chicken satay that’s amazing. She marinates the chicken, grills it, and then makes this peanut butter sauce that you dip it in by the spoonful. I would say that’s my favorite.
mbg: How do you mentally prepare for a game?
Maher: It’s interesting because I try not to let rugby control my mind the whole time. When people are like, “Oh, how do you do social media with the rugby?” But it’s actually about finding that balance because if I was thinking about rugby all the time, it would be a lot. I think sometimes it can be a nice escape.
But to get into the game, before it starts, I do have to amp myself up. It’s such a hard sport. I feel so tired constantly. I’m getting beat up out there. And we play in these hot places.
I say to myself before I’m about to run out, “If it were easy, everybody would do it. This is a very hard sport, and I’m so honored that I can do it.” It kind of puts it into perspective when I’m tired.
It’s also about connecting with my teammates and getting to do this with my best buddies.
mbg: What’s the most intense thing you’ve ever tried to optimize your performance?
Maher: I don’t know if this is really intense, but heat training. We play in such hot environments sometimes—like Singapore; Hong Kong; Perth, Australia, during heat waves, and as high as 114 degrees—so we get into heat acclimation. Preparing yourself to be able to perform in that environment starts back home. So even now I do heat acclimation just to prepare myself for summer in Paris.
For example, we’ll sit in the sauna after we did a bike session in a heated room with sweatshirts and sweatpants on. Or we get into a hot tub with our sweatpants on.
mbg: How do you rebound after a tough game?
Maher: That’s been something I’ve definitely been learning, like constantly. It never gets easier, but you learn how to deal with it better in a way. In the last Olympics, we lost, and that was very hard, but I’ve been learning how to play it to my advantage.
After we lose, one thing I focus on is connecting with my teammates.
Because a lot of times people put things on themselves like, “Oh, I knocked that ball on,” or “I missed that tackle that led to [the loss].” It’s important to remember that no one moment loses a game for us. We have so many moments throughout a game, and it’s never that one moment. Like, yeah, maybe someone missed that tackle, but what about earlier in the game when I missed it?
You’re not out there alone, and you’re not losing on your own. You’re losing with this other group of women who are going through the same stuff. So it’s really important to be with them and connect with them, laugh about it, talk about the parts that went well, the parts that went bad, what to take from it.
mbg: I wanted to ask you about teammates anyway. One of the things that playing sports teaches us is how to be a good teammate and how to show up for other people. So what makes a good teammate? How do you show up for your teammates?
Maher: I think what’s fun about being on a team is having those different personalities around you. You need the person who is going to go quiet and wants to get in their head before a game. Or myself before a game, I’m loud, I want to dance, and I want to connect with people. So it’s important to recognize there are so many different teammates and personalities that make up a team—and that’s what makes a team special. You don’t want all the same athletes out there.
Being a good teammate is also about helping others rise up as well. For example, what I’ve been trying to do on social media has been for myself, but it’s also been for my teammates. I try to bring them into any video I can or encourage them to post.