Training Guide

Padel Off-Season TrainingBuild the Base for Next Season

The off-season is the highest-return training window of the year. No match schedule to work around. No fatigue to manage. Just time to build the strength, fix the imbalances, and address the injuries that the season never gave you room to resolve.

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The PadelRevive Team
Written by players, for players — built in Zanzibar
12 weeks

is enough off-season time to make meaningful physical improvements

3 phases

structure the off-season — transition, base building, and strength/power

4 weeks

of deload and corrective work before loading up — skipping this causes injury

In short: the off-season has three phases. The first 1 to 2 weeks is transition — active recovery, deload, and fixing the acute damage from the season. The middle 6 to 8 weeks is base building — hypertrophy, aerobic foundation, and corrective work for chronic imbalances. The final 2 to 4 weeks is strength and power conversion — heavier loading, sport-specific conditioning, and preparation for the return to padel. Each phase has different goals and different methods.

Phase 1: Transition (Weeks 1-2)

Active recovery, deload, and addressing the acute damage the season leaves behind

Phase 1

Why You Cannot Jump Straight Into Heavy Training After the Season

The state your body is in at the end of a padel season

At the end of a competitive padel season, the body is in a cumulative fatigue state. Weeks or months of match play, travel, limited recovery time, and — for most recreational players — inadequate in-season training volume create a cocktail of neuromuscular fatigue, low-grade tissue inflammation, depleted glycogen stores, and psychological burnout. Jumping straight into high-volume strength training from this state is a reliable path to overuse injury. The tissues that tolerate load well when they are fresh and well-recovered are far more vulnerable to adaptation-related injuries when they are already compromised.

The transition phase protects against this. It is not rest — active recovery is significantly more effective than complete rest for accelerating the clearance of metabolic waste, reducing inflammation, and returning connective tissue to a healthy loading state. But it is deliberately low intensity and low volume, allowing the system to reset before the heavier loading of the base-building phase begins.

What to do in the transition phase

For the first one to two weeks of the off-season, replace padel and structured gym training with non-impact cardiovascular activity — cycling, swimming, walking, easy rowing — for 30 to 45 minutes, three to four times per week. The heart rate should stay below 70% of maximum. No intervals, no intensity, no muscle-group-specific loading. Add daily mobility work: 10 to 15 minutes of the hip flexor, thoracic, and ankle mobility exercises that the season never gave you time for. This is also the right time for the manual therapy you put off during the season — sports massage, physiotherapy assessment of any persistent niggles, and dry needling for chronic muscle tension.

Players who resist the transition phase — who feel that two weeks of easy work is wasted time — consistently perform worse in the base-building phase that follows. The transition is not a break from training. It is the preparation that allows everything that follows to be more effective.

Phase 2: Base Building (Weeks 3-10)

Hypertrophy, aerobic foundation, and corrective work — the things impossible to do in-season

The base-building phase is where the real work happens. This is the longest phase and the most important one — it sets the physical ceiling that the strength and power phase will then convert into sport-specific quality. It has three parallel streams: muscle hypertrophy (building the raw material), aerobic base (building the engine), and corrective work (fixing the imbalances).

Hypertrophy: Building Muscle Mass

The off-season is the optimal time for hypertrophy training because it requires caloric surplus, high volume, and adequate recovery — all of which are incompatible with competitive match play. Use higher training volumes (3 to 5 sets per exercise, 8 to 15 repetitions) across all major muscle groups. For padel players, prioritise posterior chain (hamstrings, glutes, upper back), as these are systematically undertrained relative to the anterior muscles the sport demands. A padel player with a strong posterior chain has better deceleration mechanics, better rotational power, and significantly lower injury risk. See our lower body training guide for the specific exercises.

Aerobic Base: Building the Engine

Aerobic capacity responds to volume — and the off-season is when you can add volume without it interfering with match performance. Two to three steady aerobic sessions per week at 65 to 75% of maximum heart rate, lasting 30 to 45 minutes each, builds the aerobic base that determines your recovery between points and your endurance in the third set. Cycling is the preferred modality for padel players because it provides a strong cardiovascular stimulus without adding impact load on top of the season’s accumulated joint stress. This aerobic work is the foundation on which the intensity training of the late pre-season will be layered.

Corrective Work: Fixing What the Season Broke

The in-season training guide explains why you cannot do significant corrective work during competition — there is not enough recovery time and the stimulus competes with match performance. The off-season removes both constraints. This is when you address the hip flexor restriction that built up over the season, the rotator cuff weakness that made your shoulder uncomfortable after heavy smash sessions, the ankle dorsiflexion limitation that contributed to that calf tightness in autumn. See our hip flexor training guide and our ankle strengthening guide for specific corrective protocols.

Returning to Competition Weight (If Relevant)

The off-season is also the appropriate time to adjust bodyweight if the season’s nutrition and schedule left you heavier than your optimal playing weight. During the season, caloric restriction competes directly with recovery and performance. In the off-season, a modest caloric deficit of 300 to 500 kcal per day combined with the higher training volumes of base building allows for body composition improvement without compromising athletic development. Do not attempt aggressive cutting phases — the goal is slow, sustainable change that preserves the muscle mass you are simultaneously building through hypertrophy training.

Phase 3: Strength and Power Conversion (Weeks 9-12)

Converting hypertrophy gains into sport-specific strength and explosive power for the return to padel

The final phase of off-season training converts the muscle mass and aerobic base built in phase 2 into the sport-specific qualities padel demands: maximal strength, explosive power, and the conditioning to sustain both across a full match. This is where the training stimulus shifts from high-volume moderate-load work toward lower-volume heavier-load work, and where plyometric and sport-specific conditioning is introduced.
Phase 3

How to Convert Base Gains Into Court Performance

Strength conversion: heavier loads, lower volume

Shift from the 3 to 5 sets of 8 to 15 repetitions of the hypertrophy phase to 3 to 4 sets of 4 to 6 repetitions at heavier loads. This is where the muscle mass built in phase 2 becomes functional strength — the ability to produce high forces rapidly. The exercises remain the same (Bulgarian split squat, Romanian deadlift, lateral band work, rows, press) but the loading parameters change. This phase typically produces the largest strength gains of the off-season because the muscle hypertrophy from phase 2 provides the structural capacity and the heavier loads provide the neural drive. Two strength sessions per week in this phase, allowing full recovery between sessions.

Power introduction: plyometrics and explosive work

In weeks 10 to 12, introduce plyometric training: box jumps, lateral bounds, reactive split-step drills, and medicine ball rotational throws. Plyometrics convert strength into power — the rate of force development that determines how fast your split-step is, how explosive your first step becomes, and how quickly your muscles can absorb and produce force during direction changes. Plyometric training should follow strength work in the same session, not precede it, and sessions should be kept short (15 to 20 minutes) to maintain quality. See our plyometric training guide for the complete progression.

Sport-specific conditioning: returning to padel movement

In the final two weeks before the competitive season begins, reintroduce padel-specific movement conditioning. Ghost training (court movement patterns without a ball), feeding drills, and brief on-court sessions prepare the body for the specific demands of match play after the off-season training stimulus. These sessions should be low intensity in weeks 11 and 12 — the goal is movement quality and neuromuscular preparation, not fitness development. A light deload week in the final week before the season begins (reduced volume across all training) ensures you arrive at the first match fresh and peaked rather than carrying accumulated fatigue from the pre-season training block.

The Injury Prevention Window

The off-season is the only time you have enough recovery to address the chronic issues properly

Every padel player ends the season with a list of things they mean to address: the elbow that flared up in August, the shoulder that aches after heavy smash sessions, the knee that gave a warning twinge on deep lunges toward the end of the season. During the season, these issues get managed — taped, iced, rested for a day or two — and then play continues because the match schedule does not wait. The off-season is when you actually fix them.

Elbow and Forearm: Address Tendon Irritation Properly

Padel elbow — the tennis elbow-equivalent that develops in padel players from repeated forehand and backhand impact — requires a specific rehabilitation process: eccentric and isometric loading of the extensor tendons, gradual progressive loading through weeks 3 to 8 of the off-season, and avoidance of high-load racket use until the tendon has fully adapted. This process cannot be rushed and cannot be done properly while playing regularly. The off-season is the only window long enough to complete it. See our padel elbow guide for the full rehabilitation protocol.

Shoulder: Restore Balance Before the Next Season

The overhead-dominant loading pattern of padel — smashes, bandejas, viboras — systematically overloads the internal rotators and anterior shoulder while relatively neglecting the external rotators and posterior rotator cuff. Over a season, this imbalance builds toward the shoulder impingement and rotator cuff irritation that many padel players experience as a dull ache after intensive sessions. The off-season provides 8 to 10 weeks to restore the strength balance: targeted external rotation work, lower trapezius activation, serratus anterior strengthening, and thoracic mobility training. See our shoulder strengthening guide for the specific protocol.

Hip and Lower Back: Address the Flexion Pattern

The repeated hip flexion of the padel ready position and court movement creates predictable imbalances: shortened hip flexors, inhibited glutes, and restricted lumbar rotation. The in-season management is limited to maintenance. The off-season is when you restore full hip flexor length and strength (see our hip flexor training guide), rebuild glute activation patterns, and work through the thoracic and lumbar mobility that reduces lower back loading during the next season’s shots and movements.

Ankles and Calves: Tendon Rehabilitation Before It Becomes Tendinopathy

Achilles and peroneal tendon irritation is common in regular padel players, and the in-season management strategy — load modification, ice, gradual return — does not allow the progressive loading that tendons need to fully adapt. The off-season provides the uninterrupted loading cycle that Achilles tendinopathy rehabilitation requires: 8 to 12 weeks of progressive eccentric and isometric calf loading, without the repeated impact of match play interrupting the adaptation process. See our ankle strengthening guide for the tendon loading protocol.

The niggle that becomes a season-ending injury

Every player has at least one chronic issue they have been managing for months. The off-season is the only window long enough to actually resolve it rather than just suppress it. Players who enter the new season with unresolved chronic issues from the previous season consistently sustain that same injury more severely within the first 6 to 8 weeks of competition. The off-season rehabilitation is not optional maintenance — it is the prevention of the more serious injury that follows if the issue is not addressed.

12-Week Off-Season Plan Outline

A block-by-block overview of how to structure the off-season from end of season to return to competition

WeeksPhaseGym TrainingCardioCorrective/Rehab
1-2TransitionNone or light bodyweight onlyEasy cycling/swimming, 3-4x/week, HR below 70%Physiotherapy, sports massage, mobility daily
3-5Early Base3x/week, 3-4 sets x 10-15 reps, moderate load. Full body or upper/lower split.Steady aerobic 3x/week, 30-40 min at 65-75% HRTargeted rehab for known issues — eccentric loading for tendons, hip flexor and rotator cuff corrective work
6-8Late Base3x/week, 4-5 sets x 8-12 reps, increasing load. Prioritise posterior chain and single-leg work.Maintain aerobic base; begin introducing one HIIT session per week in week 8Continue corrective work — by week 8, most acute rehab should be complete
9-10Strength Conversion2-3x/week, 3-4 sets x 4-6 reps, heavy loads. Neural drive and maximal strength emphasis.2x HIIT per week (sport-specific intervals), 1x steady aerobicMaintenance mobility only — corrective phase should be complete
11-12Power and Pre-Season2x/week heavy, add plyometrics post-session (box jumps, lateral bounds, split-step drills)On-court conditioning: ghost training, feeding drills with sprint recoveryFull deload in week 12 — arrive at the season fresh

This is a 12-week overview. Your specific exercises, loads, and session structures should be drawn from the individual training guides. If your off-season is shorter (8-10 weeks), compress the transition and early base phases while preserving the length of the strength conversion and power phases.

You know the feeling — first week back in the new season, and your legs are already complaining about lunges that felt fine a year ago. Most players don’t realise the off-season is not a break from training, it’s the only time training actually works without compromise. What actually works is treating those 12 weeks as a building project with a deadline: the season starts whether you’re ready or not.
12 weeks
of structured off-season work — enough to change your next season entirely
3 phases
transition, base building, strength — each with a distinct purpose
2 weeks
of deload and transition before loading — skip this and pay for it in November

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should an off-season training programme be for padel players?

A full off-season programme runs 10 to 12 weeks, covering three distinct phases: 1 to 2 weeks of transition and active recovery, 6 to 8 weeks of base building (hypertrophy, aerobic foundation, corrective work), and 2 to 4 weeks of strength and power conversion before the new season. If your off-season is shorter — 8 weeks, for example — compress the transition phase to one week and the early base phase to 3 weeks, but preserve the full length of the strength conversion and power phases, as these are most directly relevant to on-court performance.

Should I play padel during the off-season?

In the first two weeks (transition phase), avoid padel entirely — the body needs a break from the sport-specific loading pattern. From weeks 3 to 10, occasional casual padel (once a week at most, no competitive matches) is fine and helps maintain technical skills. In weeks 10 to 12, reintroduce padel-specific conditioning drills and then light on-court sessions to prepare the body for the return to competition. Avoid competitive match play until the new season begins — competitive play creates the recovery and fatigue management constraints that prevent full off-season training from proceeding as planned.

What is the most important thing to prioritise in a padel off-season?

If you have a specific chronic injury or persistent niggle from the previous season — an elbow, a shoulder, a knee — addressing that takes priority over any general training objective. The off-season is the only window long enough to complete a proper rehabilitation cycle for tendon issues (8 to 12 weeks of progressive loading) or to restore significant strength imbalances. A player who enters the new season without the chronic issue is in a categorically better position than one who gained 5% more strength but still has unresolved tendon irritation that will recur under season loading.

Can I gain significant strength during a 12-week off-season?

Yes. Twelve weeks of consistent hypertrophy training (3 to 5 sets of 8 to 15 repetitions, two to three sessions per week, progressive overload) produces meaningful muscle mass gains in most recreational to competitive padel players, particularly those who have not trained with that volume before. The subsequent strength conversion phase (weeks 9 to 12) then converts those hypertrophy gains into functional strength — the combination produces significantly greater strength improvements over the full 12 weeks than either approach alone. Most recreational players who complete a structured 12-week off-season programme arrive at the new season noticeably stronger than they began the previous one.

How is off-season training different from pre-season training?

The terms are sometimes used interchangeably but refer to different periods. The off-season begins immediately after the competitive season ends — it starts with transition and active recovery before progressing to base building. Pre-season refers to the final 4 to 6 weeks before competition begins — it overlaps with the strength and power conversion phase of the off-season. The distinction matters because the objectives differ: off-season work prioritises building physical qualities (hypertrophy, aerobic base, corrective rehabilitation), while pre-season work prioritises converting those qualities into match-ready performance (heavier strength, power, sport-specific conditioning).

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