Injury Guide

Padel Groin Strain

Adductor muscle injuries from lateral split-steps, wide lunges, and rapid direction changes. Grades 1-3, acute care, 3-phase rehab, and Copenhagen plank prevention.

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The Padel Revive Team
Written by players, reviewed against sport-medicine literature · Updated May 2026
Reviewed by a sports physiotherapistLast updated: May 2026 · Evidence-based content
31%

Fewer groin injuries with a Copenhagen plank protocol (Danish study)

4-6 wk

Grade 2 recovery — the most common padel presentation

#1

Adductor longus — the most frequently strained adductor in sport

In short: a padel groin strain is an adductor muscle injury caused by the sport’s extreme lateral demands. Grade 1 heals in 1-2 weeks. Grade 2 takes 4-6 weeks. Grade 3 needs a surgical assessment. The Copenhagen plank is the single best evidence-based exercise to prevent it from happening again.

The Adductor Muscles: What Gets Strained and Why

Five muscles work together to pull your leg inward. In padel, all five are under extreme eccentric load.

The inner thigh is not one muscle — it is a group of five adductors working in coordination. Understanding which one is injured changes how you treat it.

The Five Adductor Muscles

Adductor Longus

The most commonly strained adductor. Originates at the pubic crest and symphysis, runs obliquely down to the medial femur. It is the first to load during a wide split-step and the first to give way under excessive stretch.

Adductor Magnus

The largest and deepest adductor. Bridges the inner thigh from the pubic ramus to the medial epicondyle of the femur. Less commonly torn in isolation, but central to explosive push-off strength.

Adductor Brevis

The shortest adductor. Sits between longus and magnus and primarily assists hip flexion alongside adduction. Rarely strained alone but is frequently irritated when longus is injured.

Gracilis

A long, thin muscle running from the pubis to just below the medial knee. It also flexes the knee, meaning a gracilis strain can cause inner knee pain that mimics ligament injury.

Pectineus

The most anterior adductor. Assists both hip adduction and flexion. Pectineus strains often present as deep groin pain felt more at the front of the hip crease than the inner thigh.

When a physio says you have a “groin strain,” they almost always mean the adductor longus. It sits closest to the surface, takes the highest eccentric load during padel movements, and its musculotendinous junction is a known weak point under rapid stretch.

Why Padel Specifically Causes Groin Strains

Three movement patterns concentrate enormous force through the adductors

Padel is unique among racket sports because it requires constant wide lateral movement on a compact court with walls. That combination produces three specific movement patterns that overload the adductors.

1. The Lateral Split-Step

The split-step lands with both feet wide. In that moment of landing, the adductors are working eccentrically — contracting while being stretched — to absorb impact and control the stance. If the foot plants wider than expected, or if the push-off is explosive without adequate preparation, that eccentric demand spikes beyond what the muscle can handle. This is the single most common mechanism for adductor longus strain in padel.

2. Rapid Direction Changes

Changing direction in padel happens within one to two steps. The trailing leg must absorb the deceleration force while the leading leg drives the new direction. Both actions load the adductors simultaneously. In a three-hour match with hundreds of direction changes, cumulative fatigue is the hidden injury trigger — the muscle does not fail at peak freshness, it fails after the 400th sprint of the evening.

3. Wide Defensive Lunges

Reaching for a ball at the wall or in the back corner demands a lunge well outside the normal base of support. In that wide position, the adductors are stretched toward end-range. Add the rotational force of a forehand or backhand at the same moment and you have the perfect storm for a muscle tear. This pattern is especially common when players are fatigued late in a match.

The padel court also plays a role. Hard concrete surfaces increase ground reaction forces, reducing the time the muscle has to absorb load. Players who regularly play on harder courts report higher rates of groin complaints than those on artificial turf.

Groin Strain Grades 1, 2 and 3

The grade tells you how much tissue is damaged and how long you will be off the court

Adductor strains are classified into three grades based on the proportion of muscle fibres torn. Knowing your grade is the single most important piece of information for planning your return to court.
GradeTissue DamageSymptomsRecovery
Grade 1Mild — less than 5% of fibres tornMild tightness in the groin. You can walk normally. Tender on palpation. No visible bruising.1-2 weeks
Grade 2Partial tear — 5-95% of fibres disruptedAntalgic gait (limping). Weak adduction against resistance. Possible bruising along the inner thigh after 24-48 hours.4-6 weeks
Grade 3Complete rupture — full thickness tearSevere acute pain. Unable to adduct against any resistance. Significant bruising tracking toward the knee. Requires surgical assessment.3-6 months (surgical or conservative)
Differentiating from similar injuries

Hip flexor strain: Pain on resisted hip flexion (lifting the knee), not adduction. The hip flexor (iliopsoas) sits anterior to the adductors. Test: squeeze your knees together against resistance — if it hurts, that is adductor. Lift your knee against resistance — if that hurts more, that is hip flexor.

Sports hernia / Athletic pubalgia: Pubic symphysis pain that worsens with exertion, coughing, or sneezing. No acute onset mechanism. Pain is felt at the midline rather than the inner thigh. Requires imaging and specialist referral — physiotherapy alone is insufficient.

Acute Treatment: The First 72 Hours

What you do in the first three days determines how fast the next six weeks go

The old RICE protocol (Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation) has been updated to PEACE and LOVE in sports medicine — but the core principle is unchanged: protect the tissue, control swelling, and start gentle loading as soon as pain allows.

Hours 0-72: Immediate Management

1
Stop play immediately.

Continuing to play on a grade 2 or 3 strain risks converting a partial tear into a complete rupture. No match is worth six months off court.

2
Ice for 15-20 minutes every 2-3 hours.

Wrap ice in a cloth — never direct skin contact. Ice reduces acute bleeding into the tissue and controls pain. Continue for the first 48-72 hours.

3
Compression and relative rest.

A compression bandage or compression shorts reduce swelling. Relative rest means no lateral movement, sprinting, or kicking. Walking flat on level ground is fine for grade 1 and most grade 2 strains.

4
Pain-free isometric adduction from day 1-3.

Gentle isometric holds begin the healing signal without stressing the tear. Sit with knees bent, place a ball or folded towel between your knees, and squeeze gently for 5 seconds. If pain-free, this is your first rehabilitation exercise.

5
Seek assessment for grade 2 or grade 3 suspicion.

If you cannot walk without limping 24 hours after injury, or if bruising tracks down the inner thigh, see a physiotherapist or sports doctor within 48 hours. Ultrasound can confirm grade and rule out avulsion fracture.

3-Phase Rehabilitation Plan

Isometric to isotonic to sport-specific — the progression that protects against re-injury

Returning to padel too early is the leading cause of recurrent groin strains. The three-phase approach below is based on current physiotherapy consensus. Progress between phases only when you meet the criteria — not based on calendar time alone.
PHASE 1
Days 1-5: Isometric Loading

Goal: Reduce pain, control swelling, begin the healing signal through gentle isometric muscle activation.

Isometric adduction squeeze: Seated, knees bent to 90 degrees, ball or towel between knees. Squeeze for 5 seconds, relax. 3 x 10 reps, 2-3 times daily. Pain must stay below 3/10.

Standing isometric holds: Stand beside a wall. Press the inside of the injured leg against the wall with gentle force. Hold 5-10 seconds. If pain-free, progress ramp of force over days 3-5.

Avoid: Stretching the groin (counter-intuitive but correct — early passive stretching disrupts healing fibre alignment). No running, cutting, or wide stance movements.

Progression criteria: Pain-free walking. Isometric squeeze rated 0-1/10 pain. Minimal swelling.
PHASE 2
Weeks 1-4: Isotonic Strengthening

Goal: Restore full range of motion, rebuild adductor strength through concentric and eccentric loading.

Side-lying hip adduction: Lying on the uninvured side, lower leg straight. Lift the lower leg off the floor through adduction. 3 x 15 reps. Add ankle weight progressively (0.5 kg increments).

Standing cable or band adduction: Attach resistance band at ankle height. Stand side-on. Pull the injured leg across midline against resistance. Slow eccentric return over 3-4 seconds. 3 x 12 reps.

Sumo squats: Wide stance, toes turned out 30-45 degrees. Controlled descent. Adductors work eccentrically on the way down. Begin bodyweight, add load when pain-free through full range.

Copenhagen plank progressions (short lever): Place the lower leg on a bench with the ankle supported. Body in side-plank position. Hold for 10-20 seconds. Builds adductor endurance in a loaded lateral position.

Progression criteria: Pain-free jogging in straight line. Adduction strength at least 70% of uninvolved side. Full range of motion without discomfort.
PHASE 3
Weeks 4-8: Sport-Specific Return

Goal: Replicate the exact movement patterns of padel at progressive intensity. Do not return to match play until all criteria are met.

Lateral shuffle drills: Low-intensity lateral shuffles at half-court width. Progress to full width over 2-3 sessions. Introduce change of direction once lateral running is pain-free.

Split-step practice: Practice the padel split-step pattern on court without hitting. Focus on landing width and controlled deceleration. Start narrow, progress to match-width over one week.

Copenhagen plank (long lever): Ankle on bench, full body side-plank. Hold 20-40 seconds. This is the benchmark exercise for return-to-sport adductor readiness.

Progressive on-court rallies: Feeding-only sessions first, then cooperative rallies, then competitive points. Match play last.

Return-to-play criteria: Adduction strength equal to uninvolved side. Pain-free during all lateral movements including explosive split-step. Copenhagen plank (long lever) 3 x 30 seconds each side.
You know the feeling — a tweak in the groin, a moment of doubt mid-rally, and then the choice: do you keep playing or stop? Most players don’t realise that pushing through a grade 2 strain can double the recovery time. What actually works is stopping immediately, starting pain-free isometrics within 24 hours, and following the phase progression without shortcuts.
31%
Reduction in groin injuries with Copenhagen plank training (Danish elite football study)
2x
Higher re-injury risk when returning to court before strength symmetry is restored
1-3 days
Optimal window to start pain-free isometrics after a grade 1-2 strain

Prevention: Adductor Strengthening and Copenhagen Planks

The strongest evidence base in sports medicine for groin injury prevention

The Copenhagen adductor exercise (also called the Copenhagen plank or Copenhagen hip adduction) has the strongest published evidence for preventing groin strains in any court or field sport. A Danish study across elite football clubs found a 31% reduction in groin injuries in players who completed a Copenhagen protocol versus those who did not.

The Copenhagen Plank: How to Do It Correctly

Short Lever (Beginner)
  1. Lie on your side. Place the lower knee on a bench at knee height.
  2. Forearm on floor directly under shoulder. Body in side-plank.
  3. Lift hips so the body forms a straight diagonal line.
  4. Hold 10-20 seconds. Lower with control.
  5. 3 sets each side. 2 minutes rest between sets.
Long Lever (Return-to-Sport)
  1. Lie on your side. Place the lower ankle (not knee) on a bench.
  2. Same side-plank position as above.
  3. Greater leverage means higher adductor force.
  4. Target: 3 x 30 seconds each side before return to play.
  5. For prevention: 2 x 20 seconds each side, 2-3 times per week.

The Weekly Prevention Protocol

Add these to your pre-match or gym routine. Three sessions per week is the dose used in the Danish research.

Copenhagen plank (short or long lever): 2-3 x 20-30 seconds each side
Sumo deadlift or wide-stance squat: 3 x 10 reps, controlled eccentric phase
Lateral band walks: 2 x 20 steps each direction with resistance band at ankles
Dynamic warm-up before every session: Lateral lunges x 10 each side, hip circles x 10 each direction, cossack squats x 8 each side
Manage load: Limit sessions to every 48 hours if you are training more than 3 times per week. Adductor fatigue accumulates faster than perceived.

Keep Reading

What the Evidence Says
Compiled from cited medical sources — pending clinical review.
In short
Adductor strains typically occur due to forceful hip extension and external rotation of an abducted leg, often involving strong eccentric contraction, or sudden changes in direction, rapid… (choosept.com, orthobullets.com, clevelandclinic.org) First-line conservative treatment for adductor strains includes PEACE & LOVE principles (Protection, Elevation, Avoid anti-inflammatories, Compression, Education, Load, Optimism, Vascularisation,… (choosept.com, sportsmedtoday.com, orthobullets.com)
At a Glance
What it isThe adductor muscle group, located in the inner thigh, consists of six main muscles (adductor longus, brevis, magnus, pectineus, gracilis, obturator externus) whose primary function is hip and thigh adduction. (choosept.com, sportsmedtoday.com, orthobullets.com)
Why padel causes itAdductor strains typically occur due to forceful hip extension and external rotation of an abducted leg, often involving strong eccentric contraction, or sudden changes in direction, rapid acceleration/deceleration,… (choosept.com, orthobullets.com, clevelandclinic.org)
Main symptomAdductor strains typically present with sudden onset severe pain in the groin or medial thigh, worsening with activity, and can include tenderness, swelling, bruising, muscle weakness/tightness, difficulty moving the… (choosept.com, sportsmedtoday.com, orthobullets.com)
First-line treatmentFirst-line conservative treatment for adductor strains includes PEACE & LOVE principles (Protection, Elevation, Avoid anti-inflammatories, Compression, Education, Load, Optimism, Vascularisation, Exercise) in the acute… (choosept.com, sportsmedtoday.com, orthobullets.com)
Rehab approachRehabilitation for adductor strains is criterion-based, progressing from acute pain management (Phase 1: RICE, gentle isometrics, minimal pain <2/10 for progression) to early resistance (Phase 2: resisted adduction, core… (choosept.com, srinobharammd.com, coresurgicalmd.com)
Returning to playReturn to play for adductor strains is criteria-based, requiring no or minimal pain (0-2/10) during clinical examination and sport-specific activities, regaining at least 70% strength compared to the uninjured side… (kineticlabs.ca, nih.gov, e3rehab.com)
PreventionPrevention of adductor strains involves gradual increases in activity intensity (not exceeding 10% per week), consistent strength and flexibility programs, strengthening adductor and supporting muscles (e.g., Copenhagen… (choosept.com, orthosportandspine.com, kineticlabs.ca)
⚠️ When to seek urgent care
Red-flag signs for groin pain requiring urgent medical attention include groin pain with back/stomach/chest pain, sudden severe testicle pain, testicle pain/swelling with systemic symptoms (nausea, fever, weight loss), inability to weight bear, history of cancer, or throbbing abdominal pain.
Source: healthgrades.com, baptisthealth.com, mayoclinic.org
This is general education, not medical advice or a diagnosis. For an assessment or treatment plan, see a physiotherapist or doctor.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my groin strain is grade 1, 2 or 3?

Grade 1: mild tightness, you can walk normally, tender when pressed. Grade 2: partial tear, you limp, weak adduction against resistance, bruising may appear after 24-48 hours. Grade 3: severe acute pain, you cannot adduct at all, significant bruising. If you are not sure, see a physiotherapist — ultrasound confirms the grade and rules out avulsion fracture at the pubic attachment.

Can I keep playing padel with a groin strain?

Not with a grade 2 or 3. Playing through a partial tear risks converting it into a complete rupture, turning a 4-6 week injury into a 3-6 month one. A mild grade 1 may tolerate carefully modified play, but lateral movement and explosive split-steps should be avoided until pain resolves.

How long does a padel groin strain take to heal?

Grade 1 strains heal in 1-2 weeks with good management. Grade 2 strains typically take 4-6 weeks. Grade 3 ruptures can take 3-6 months and may require surgical assessment. These timelines assume you follow a proper rehabilitation protocol — returning too early based on pain resolution alone significantly increases re-injury risk.

What is the Copenhagen plank and why is it used for groin injury prevention?

The Copenhagen plank is a side-plank variation where the lower leg rests on a bench, forcing the adductors to work isometrically against the lever of the full body weight. A Danish study demonstrated a 31% reduction in groin injuries among elite athletes who completed a Copenhagen plank protocol versus controls. It directly trains adductor strength in the same loaded lateral position the muscles must handle during a padel split-step.

Is it safe to stretch the groin after a strain?

Not in the first 3-5 days. Early passive stretching of a strained muscle disrupts the healing fibre alignment and slows recovery. Pain-free isometric exercises (squeezing, not stretching) are the correct early intervention. Gentle range-of-motion work can begin once acute pain has settled, typically from day 5-7 for grade 1 and week 2-3 for grade 2.

How is a groin strain different from a sports hernia?

A groin strain has an acute onset mechanism (a wide movement, a sudden pull) and produces inner thigh pain that is worse with hip adduction against resistance. A sports hernia (athletic pubalgia) involves pubic symphysis or inguinal pain that builds gradually with exertion and is reproduced by coughing, sneezing, or sit-ups. Sports hernia rarely has an acute onset and does not respond to standard adductor rehabilitation alone. If your pain is at the midline and there was no acute incident, seek specialist assessment.

When can I return to padel after a groin strain?

Return to play when: you are pain-free during all lateral movements including explosive split-steps; adduction strength equals the uninvolved side on manual testing; you can complete 3 x 30 seconds of the Copenhagen plank (long lever) without discomfort; you have completed sport-specific drills at full intensity without symptoms. Do not base return on a calendar. Base it on meeting these criteria.

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