Injury Guide

Padel Meniscus Injury: Tears, Treatment, and Return to Play

Meniscus tears in padel happen from plant-and-twist movements, deep defensive lunges, and sudden deceleration. The blood supply zone determines whether your tear can heal — and that determines everything about treatment.

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The PadelRevive Team
Written by players, for players — built in Zanzibar
Reviewed by a sports physiotherapistLast updated: May 2026 · Evidence-based content
2 menisci

medial and lateral — each with different injury risk and healing capacity

3-6 months

typical return to play after meniscal repair surgery

Outer third

the only zone with enough blood supply to heal naturally

In short: padel meniscus injuries occur when the foot is planted and the body rotates, compressing the cartilage wedges between the femur and tibia. The medial meniscus is injured more often because it is less mobile — attached to the medial collateral ligament. The lateral meniscus is more commonly torn by twisting mechanisms. Whether a tear heals depends on which blood supply zone it occupies: the outer red zone can heal; the inner white zone cannot. This single anatomical fact determines whether your treatment is conservative rehabilitation or surgery.

Meniscus Anatomy: What You Are Actually Injuring

Two cartilage wedges, three blood supply zones, and why location is everything

The menisci are two C-shaped (medial) and near-circular (lateral) cartilage wedges sitting between the femur and tibia. Their job is to absorb shock, distribute load evenly across the knee joint, and provide rotational stability — all three of which are tested every time a padel player decelerates out of a sprint, pivots on a planted foot, or drops into a deep defensive lunge.
Medial Meniscus

C-shaped and larger than the lateral. Attached to the medial collateral ligament (MCL), which restricts its movement — making it significantly less mobile and more vulnerable to injury. When the tibia rotates under a fixed femur, the medial meniscus cannot escape and gets pinched. This is why it is injured approximately twice as often as the lateral meniscus in most sports.

More commonly injured. Inner joint line pain.

Lateral Meniscus

More circular in shape and not attached to the lateral collateral ligament (LCL), which gives it greater mobility. This mobility makes it more resistant to degenerative tears but more susceptible to acute tears under high-speed twisting mechanisms — the lateral pivot-shift loading common in padel. Lateral meniscus tears are more frequently associated with ACL injuries.

Outer joint line pain. Often linked to twisting trauma.

Blood Supply Zones: The Most Important Concept in Meniscus Management

Your blood supply zone determines whether your tear can heal — or never will

Outer Third — Red Zone
Has Blood Supply. CAN Heal.

The peripheral outer rim of the meniscus receives a blood supply from surrounding vessels — the same blood supply that allows bone fractures and muscle tears to heal. Tears in this zone have genuine healing potential with appropriate management. Meniscal repair surgery is possible and often successful here. Conservative management can also be effective in younger players with small peripheral tears.

Best prognosis. Repair is often the preferred surgical option for active players.

Middle Third — Red-White Zone
Poor Blood Supply. Uncertain Healing.

The transition zone between the vascular outer rim and the avascular inner zone. Blood supply here is marginal. Healing is inconsistent and unpredictable. Surgical decisions for tears in this zone depend on tear size, pattern, patient age, and activity demands. Repair is sometimes attempted, particularly in younger active patients. Outcomes are less predictable than red zone repairs.

Variable prognosis. Clinical assessment and imaging required to decide management.

Inner Third — White Zone
No Blood Supply. CANNOT Heal Naturally.

The inner two-thirds of the meniscus are avascular — no blood supply reaches here. Without blood supply, there are no circulating repair cells, and the tissue cannot mount a healing response. Tears in this zone do not heal with rest or conservative management, regardless of duration. Surgical options are limited to partial meniscectomy (trimming the torn fragment) or conservative symptom management, accepting that the tear will not close.

No natural healing. Partial meniscectomy or symptom management are the only options.

How Padel Causes Meniscus Tears

Three specific court mechanisms — and which one carries the highest risk

Mechanism 1
Plant-and-Twist

The most common meniscus injury mechanism in padel. The foot is planted firmly on the court surface — often in a split-step or when setting up to intercept a ball — and the body pivots over it. The femur rotates on a fixed tibia, and the medial meniscus is caught between the two. Because it is tethered to the MCL, it cannot slide out of the way. The result is a shear force through the meniscal body, producing tears most commonly in the posterior horn of the medial meniscus.

Mechanism 2
Deep Squat Lunge

The padel-specific defensive lunge that takes the knee into deep flexion under full body weight. In this position, the femur and tibia compress the posterior horns of both menisci maximally. Add any rotational component — reaching for a wide ball, twisting to get under a low shot — and the compressive and shear forces combine. This mechanism is particularly common in experienced players who have developed the range of motion to play very low shots, exposing the menisci to loads they were not trained for.

Mechanism 3
Sudden Deceleration

Sprinting to the back corner and stopping hard. The braking force drives the tibia forward relative to the femur, placing the posterior horn of the meniscus under sudden tension. A secondary valgus collapse of the knee — common when players are fatigued and hip stability fails — adds a lateral compressive component. This mechanism is more likely to injure the lateral meniscus and is also a common accompaniment to ACL injuries. If the knee buckled inward during the deceleration, request imaging to rule out ACL involvement.

A key clinical test used to identify meniscal tears is the McMurray test: the examiner flexes the knee, then applies tibial rotation while extending the leg. A palpable or audible click, combined with pain at the joint line, is a positive result strongly suggesting a meniscal tear. While not perfectly sensitive, a positive McMurray in combination with joint-line tenderness and a mechanism of injury consistent with a meniscal tear is sufficient clinical indication for MRI.

Types of Meniscus Tears

Tear pattern predicts treatment — and one type is a surgical emergency

Horizontal Tear

Runs parallel to the tibial surface, splitting the meniscus into upper and lower halves. The most common type in players over 35. Usually degenerative in origin — accumulated wear rather than a single traumatic event. Often managed conservatively with activity modification and rehabilitation. Surgery is considered when mechanical symptoms (catching, locking) develop or conservative management fails after 3-6 months.

Common in: 35+ players. Often degenerative. Conservative management frequently successful.

Radial Tear

Runs perpendicular to the meniscal circumference, cutting from the inner free edge toward the outer rim. This disrupts the hoop stress mechanism that makes the meniscus function — radial tears compromise the meniscus’s ability to distribute load, accelerating cartilage wear in the knee. Radial tears in the white zone cannot be repaired. Those extending into the red zone may be amenable to repair in younger patients. Often acutely painful with localised joint-line tenderness.

Disrupts load distribution. Location determines whether repair is possible.

WARNING — Surgical Emergency
Bucket Handle Tear

A longitudinal tear that separates a large fragment of the meniscus, which then flips into the intercondylar notch like the handle of a bucket. This displaced fragment mechanically blocks full knee extension — the knee becomes locked and physically cannot be fully straightened. If your knee cannot be fully straightened after a twisting injury and feels mechanically blocked (not just stiff or painful), this is a surgical emergency. Do not attempt to force the knee straight. Do not delay seeking orthopaedic assessment — the displaced fragment can damage the articular cartilage if left in place.

If the knee LOCKS and cannot be fully extended — go to emergency. Do not delay.

Peripheral (Rim) Tear

A longitudinal tear along the outer rim, within the red (vascular) zone. The best prognosis of all meniscal tear types. The presence of blood supply means genuine healing potential exists. Meniscal repair is preferred over meniscectomy here, particularly in active patients under 45. Surgical repair success rates in the red zone exceed 80-85% in properly selected patients. Conservative management (immobilisation followed by progressive rehabilitation) can also be attempted in stable peripheral tears in younger patients without mechanical symptoms.

Best prognosis. Red zone location means healing is biologically possible.

Conservative vs Surgical Management

The decision depends on tear type, zone, age, and mechanical symptoms

Most meniscal tears do not require immediate surgery. The decision between conservative and surgical management depends on four factors: which blood supply zone the tear occupies, whether the tear is causing mechanical symptoms (locking, catching, giving way), the patient’s age and activity demands, and whether the tear has been present long enough to develop degenerative changes.
Conservative Management

Appropriate for: partial tears in the red zone in players under 40 with no mechanical symptoms; all degenerative tears; horizontal tears in older players; white zone tears with minimal symptoms.

Timeline: 6-8 weeks acute rehabilitation before considering return-to-sport testing.

  • Week 1-2: rest, ice, compression, pain-free range of motion exercises
  • Week 2-4: quadriceps and hamstring strengthening (no deep knee flexion beyond 90 degrees)
  • Week 4-6: progressive loading, step-ups, cycling, straight-line jogging
  • Week 6-8+: sport-specific movement, return-to-play criteria testing
Surgical Management

Two options — the choice matters long-term:

Meniscal Repair: The torn fragment is sutured back in place. Only possible in vascular zones. Preferred in younger, active patients. Requires 4-6 months recovery due to the need for the repair to heal before full loading. Protects long-term knee health — preserves the meniscus.

Partial Meniscectomy: The torn fragment is trimmed and removed. Used when repair is not possible (white zone) or the tear pattern is unsuitable for suturing. Recovery is faster — 3-4 months — but removing meniscal tissue increases long-term cartilage wear. The smaller the amount removed, the better the long-term outcome.

Following a structured rehabilitation programme? Our Padel Knee Rehab Programme covers meniscal injury recovery with phase-by-phase exercises, return-to-play criteria, and ongoing strengthening to protect the knee long-term.
See the Padel Knee Rehab Programme ->

Return to Padel After a Meniscus Injury

Criteria-based return — not timeline-based

Return to padel after a meniscal injury must be based on functional criteria, not on how many weeks have passed. The knee needs to meet specific strength, stability, and movement benchmarks before it is ready for the plant-and-twist demands of padel. Returning before these are met is the primary driver of re-injury and accelerated cartilage wear.
CriterionConservativePost-MeniscectomyPost-Repair
Full pain-free ROM6-8 weeks8-10 weeks3-4 months
No swelling after activityRequiredRequiredRequired
Single-leg squat to 60 degrees pain-freeYesYesYes — at 5 months
Straight-line jogging pain-freeWeek 6-8Week 8-10Month 4
Lateral movement and pivoting pain-freeWeek 8-10Week 10-12Month 5-6

Important: Post-meniscal repair timelines are conservative by design — the sutured tissue needs time to heal under controlled loading before it can sustain the forces of padel court movements. Returning early after repair puts the repair under risk of re-tearing. Follow your surgeon’s specific protocol.

Preventing Meniscus Injuries in Padel

Strength, landing mechanics, and load management — the three levers that reduce risk

Meniscal injury prevention in padel centres on reducing the forces that tear the cartilage: rotational stress under load, compressive force in deep knee flexion, and valgus collapse during deceleration. All three are modifiable through training.
Quadriceps and Hamstring Strength

Strong quadriceps and hamstrings are the primary shock absorbers for the menisci. Every unit of quad and hamstring strength reduces the compressive load transferred to the cartilage during deceleration and deep knee flexion. Twice-weekly strength sessions with lunges, step-downs, and Romanian deadlifts are the minimum maintenance dose for players at risk.

Avoid Deep Knee Flexion Under High Load When Fatigued

The most dangerous moment for meniscal injury is a deep defensive lunge late in a match when the player is fatigued and hip stability has declined. Neuromuscular fatigue allows the knee to collapse inward (valgus) during the deepest part of the movement — exactly when compressive forces peak. Load management means accepting that some balls are better let go than chased with a degraded movement pattern in the third game.

Correct Landing Mechanics

Players who land with a stiff, straight leg or who allow the knee to drop inward on landing transmit far greater meniscal compressive force than those who absorb impact through a soft, controlled knee bend with the knee tracking over the second toe. Movement quality training — practiced in warm-ups and gym sessions — reduces meniscal load on every single split-step landing throughout a match.

You know the feeling — a single twist at the wrong moment and suddenly the knee is swollen and stiff the next morning. Most players don’t realise how much the location of a meniscal tear determines everything: whether it heals, whether it needs surgery, and how long you are off the court. What actually works is understanding your specific tear type and blood supply zone before deciding on management — because the wrong approach for the wrong tear can make a fixable problem permanent.
Red Zone
only vascular zone — the outer third that can heal
4-6 months
return to play after meniscal repair surgery
3-4 months
return to play after partial meniscectomy

Keep Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I have torn my meniscus in padel?

The classic signs are joint-line pain on the inside or outside of the knee, swelling that develops over 12-24 hours after a twisting incident, pain on squatting or coming out of a deep knee bend, and a feeling of the knee catching or clicking. If the knee cannot be fully straightened, this suggests a bucket handle tear and requires emergency assessment. A McMurray test performed by a physiotherapist or sports doctor is the standard clinical screen; MRI is the gold standard for confirmation.

Can a meniscus tear heal on its own without surgery?

It depends entirely on where the tear is. Tears in the outer third (red zone) have a blood supply and genuine healing potential — these can sometimes heal with conservative management, particularly in younger patients with small, stable peripheral tears. Tears in the inner two-thirds (white zone) have no blood supply and cannot heal naturally, regardless of how long you rest. This is why imaging is important: it determines which zone the tear occupies and guides the management decision.

How long will I be off padel with a meniscus tear?

Conservative management for a small peripheral tear: 6-10 weeks if criteria are met. Partial meniscectomy (trimming the torn fragment): 3-4 months. Meniscal repair surgery: 4-6 months minimum, with some protocols extending to 6-9 months for competitive return. These timelines assume structured rehabilitation throughout — not just rest. The single biggest predictor of a longer recovery is attempting to return before meeting the functional criteria.

What is the difference between a meniscus tear and general knee pain in padel?

General padel knee pain (patellar tendinopathy) builds gradually from overuse and is felt at or below the kneecap. Meniscal injury typically starts from a specific moment — a twist, a deep squat, a sudden stop — and produces pain along the joint line (the crease on the inner or outer side of the knee). Mechanical symptoms like locking, catching, or the knee giving way are almost always meniscal rather than tendinopathy. If your knee pain started suddenly after a twisting movement and includes any of those sensations, request imaging.

Should I get a meniscal repair or a partial meniscectomy?

This decision belongs to a surgeon with access to your imaging, but the general principles are: repair is preferred for younger, active patients with tears in the vascular red zone because it preserves the meniscal tissue and protects long-term knee health, despite the longer recovery. Partial meniscectomy is used when the tear is in the avascular white zone (where repair is not biologically possible), when the tear pattern is unsuitable for suturing, or when the patient’s activity demands or age make the longer repair recovery impractical. Removing less tissue in a meniscectomy is always better for long-term outcomes.

Can I play padel with a known meniscus tear?

With a stable, small peripheral tear that is not causing mechanical symptoms, some players do continue to play with conservative management — under clinical supervision. However, continuing to play with an unstable tear, a bucket handle tear, or a tear causing catching or locking risks extending the damage, including to the articular cartilage. Get a clinical assessment before deciding. Playing through a symptomatic meniscal tear is not the same as playing through delayed-onset muscle soreness — the consequences of getting it wrong are significantly more serious.

Is a meniscus injury worse in older padel players?

Older players (35+) are more likely to develop degenerative horizontal tears from cumulative wear rather than a single acute incident. These tend to be managed conservatively unless mechanical symptoms develop. Acute traumatic tears from a specific incident can occur at any age. However, older players also tend to have less vascular outer rim remaining in the meniscus as it ages, which limits healing potential. This makes the blood supply zone assessment even more important in older patients, and often makes partial meniscectomy the more appropriate surgical option.

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