Prevention Guide

PROTECT YOUR HAMSTRINGSThe padel player’s complete prevention system

You felt the twinge. Maybe it cost you a match, maybe it cost you weeks. Hamstring strains are the most common muscle injury in padel — and the frustrating truth is that most of them are preventable. This guide gives you the exact warm-up, strength, and mobility work that actually keeps your hamstrings healthy through a full season.

P
The PadelRevive Team
Written by players, for players — built in Zanzibar · Updated May 2026
Reviewed bya sports physiotherapistLast updated: May 2026 · Evidence-based content
37%

Most Common Muscle Injury — hamstring strains account for roughly 37% of all muscle injuries in racket sports including padel

2-3x

Re-injury Risk — players who return too soon without a strength programme are two to three times more likely to re-tear

70%

Preventable — research suggests up to 70% of hamstring strains can be avoided with a consistent warm-up and eccentric loading protocol

In short: hamstring injury prevention in padel comes down to three non-negotiables — a dynamic warm-up that primes the muscle for explosive movement, eccentric strength training like the Nordic curl that builds the tendon’s ability to resist sudden loads, and enough recovery time between sessions to let the tissue adapt. Get those three right and you dramatically cut your risk of sitting out.

Why Padel Puts Your Hamstrings at Risk

The explosive movement problem

Padel is built on short, sharp bursts. You sprint two metres to the back wall, plant hard, and reverse direction in under a second. That plant-and-push moment places the hamstring under enormous eccentric load — it has to both brake and re-accelerate the body almost simultaneously. Most recreational players have hamstrings that are conditioned for running in a straight line, not for the multi-directional deceleration demands that padel imposes every few seconds across a 90-minute match. Research on court sport athletes consistently shows that eccentric hamstring weakness, not poor flexibility, is the primary predictor of strain injury. When the muscle cannot absorb the load, it tears.

Glass walls and the lunge-reach pattern

One movement pattern unique to padel is the deep lunge into the back corners combined with an overhead reach to play a bandeja or vibora off the glass. This combination lengthens the hamstring of the trailing leg under load while the hip flexors are pulling in the opposite direction. It is a long-lever, high-tension position that most players reach dozens of times per match without ever having trained specifically for it. Add a cold muscle, a slightly wet court, or a moment of fatigue in the third set and you have a textbook hamstring strain scenario. Understanding the mechanism is the first step to preventing it.

Fatigue and the second-half spike

Studies of hamstring injuries in team sports show a clear spike in the second half of matches, when neuromuscular fatigue reduces the muscle’s ability to activate quickly. Padel is no different. We have spoken to dozens of club players who describe their strain happening in the final game of a long match or the last session of a back-to-back weekend tournament. When you are tired, your hamstrings fire more slowly, your brain sends less accurate timing signals, and a sudden sprint to a drop shot becomes a dangerous proposition. Managing fatigue — through proper warm-up, hydration, and session load — is therefore a direct hamstring injury prevention strategy, not a luxury.

The Pre-Match Warm-Up Protocol

Why static stretching before play increases injury risk

This is probably the most important thing we can tell you about hamstring injury prevention in padel: stop holding static stretches before you play. A substantial body of research — including a widely cited Cochrane review — shows that prolonged static stretching before explosive activity actually reduces force production and reaction speed for up to 30 minutes. Yet on padel courts across the UK, we still see players touching their toes and holding for 30 seconds immediately before hitting. If your muscle is temporarily weaker and slower after that stretch, you are more vulnerable during the first rallies, not less. Save static work for after the match.

Time it right

Strength Training for Hamstring Resilience

The Nordic curl — the most evidence-based exercise in sports medicine

If there is one exercise every padel player should add to their week, it is the Nordic hamstring curl. A landmark randomised controlled trial by Petersen and colleagues showed that adding Nordic curls to a football training programme reduced hamstring injury rates by 51%. The mechanism is straightforward: the Nordic curl forces the hamstring to work eccentrically — braking the leg as gravity pulls it — which is exactly what the muscle must do when you decelerate into a back-wall shot. Start with 2 sets of 5 reps twice per week. Expect significant delayed onset muscle soreness for the first two weeks. Build to 3 sets of 10 over six weeks. Do not skip this because it is hard — its difficulty is precisely why it works.

Romanian Deadlift

undefined

Single-Leg Deadlift

undefined

Glute Bridge

undefined

Leg Curl (prone or machine)

undefined

Good Morning

undefined

Sprinter Lunge

undefined

Do not train through pain

Mobility and Flexibility Work

Post-match static stretching — when it actually helps

Static stretching does have a role in hamstring injury prevention in padel — it just belongs after the session, not before it. When your hamstrings are warm and well-perfused, a 30-45 second hold in a standing hamstring stretch or supine straight-leg raise will help maintain and gradually improve the muscle’s resting length. Aim for 3 holds per leg, breathing into the stretch rather than forcing the range. Over months, improved hamstring length reduces the peak stretch demand on the muscle during a deep lunge, giving you a larger margin before the tissue reaches its failure point. Consistency matters more than intensity here — five minutes after every session beats a 30-minute stretching marathon once a fortnight.

Hip flexor and anterior chain work

Tight hip flexors force the pelvis into an anterior tilt, which places the hamstrings under chronic low-level tension even at rest. This elevated baseline tension means less reserve available before the muscle is overstretched during play. A daily 90-second kneeling hip flexor stretch — ideally combined with a posterior pelvic tilt to really open the anterior chain — is one of the simplest and most under-used hamstring protection strategies available to amateur padel players. We also recommend a daily 60-second child’s pose to decompress the lumbar spine, as lumbar tightness frequently refers tension down into the hamstring and sciatic distribution, creating confusion about whether the problem originates in the back or the leg.

Foam rolling and soft tissue work

Foam rolling the hamstrings for 60-90 seconds per leg before a dynamic warm-up can reduce perceived stiffness and improve transient range of motion without the force-production reduction associated with static stretching. Apply moderate pressure — enough to feel it without causing sharp pain — and roll slowly from the sit bone to the back of the knee. Pause on any points of increased tenderness for 10-15 seconds. Do not replace strength and mobility work with foam rolling alone — it is a useful adjunct, not a standalone strategy. Think of it as opening a door slightly before the dynamic warm-up kicks it open fully.

Load Management and Session Planning

The acute:chronic workload ratio for padel players

Sports science uses the acute:chronic workload ratio (ACWR) to predict injury risk. In plain English: how much you are playing this week relative to what your body has adapted to over the past month. A ratio above 1.5 — meaning you are suddenly doing 50% more than your baseline — is consistently associated with elevated soft tissue injury rates including hamstring strains. For a club padel player, this translates to a simple rule: do not double your court hours in a single week. If a tournament is coming up, build your volume gradually in the preceding three to four weeks. One extra session per week, not four extra sessions the week before competition.

Rest and the role of sleep in muscle repair

Sleep is the most underrated hamstring prevention tool available to amateur players. During deep sleep, growth hormone surges and drives protein synthesis in the muscle fibres stressed during play. Consistently sleeping less than seven hours per night is independently associated with higher soft tissue injury rates in athletes — not because players are less careful when tired, but because the tissue itself is literally less well-repaired. If you are playing three or more times per week, prioritise sleep as aggressively as you would your training. Aim for seven to nine hours. Keep consistent bed and wake times. Your hamstrings will thank you.

The 72-hour rule for eccentrics

Return to Play After a Hamstring Strain

Why “pain-free” does not mean “ready”

This is where most padel players get it wrong, and where re-injury rates spike. The hamstring stops hurting relatively quickly — often within a week or two for a Grade 1 or 2 strain. But the collagen scar tissue that forms during healing is stiffer and less elastic than the original muscle fibre for three to six months after injury. That scar tissue has not yet been remodelled through progressive loading, which means it is highly vulnerable to re-tear when exposed to the explosive demands of padel. Pain-free is a starting point for rehabilitation, not an endpoint. A structured return-to-run and return-to-sprint programme must precede a return to full match play.

See a physio before returning to competition

You know the feeling — you sprint hard for a drop shot, feel that familiar grab at the back of the thigh, and your stomach drops before you even stop running. We get it, because most amateur players have been through it at least once. The honest truth is that what actually works is not a miracle stretch or an expensive piece of kit. It is ten minutes of intelligent warm-up before every session and two strength sessions per week. Boring? Maybe. Effective? Absolutely.

Who This Is For

Padel players who have had a hamstring strain in the past 12 months and want to stop it happening again

Club players aged 35+ whose hamstrings feel tighter and less resilient than they used to

Anyone playing three or more times per week without a structured strength or warm-up routine

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best exercise to prevent hamstring injuries in padel?

The Nordic hamstring curl is the single most evidence-based exercise for hamstring injury prevention. Research shows it reduces hamstring strain rates by approximately 51% in court and field sport athletes. Perform 2-3 sets of 5-10 reps twice per week during the off-season, then maintain one session per week in-season. Combine with Romanian deadlifts and single-leg deadlifts for full posterior chain resilience.

Should I stretch my hamstrings before playing padel?

Avoid prolonged static stretching immediately before play. Research consistently shows it temporarily reduces muscle force output and reaction speed, increasing rather than decreasing injury risk in the early stages of a match. Instead, use a dynamic warm-up of leg swings, lunges, and progressive sprints. Save static stretching for after the session, when it genuinely helps improve long-term flexibility.

How long does hamstring injury prevention training take to work?

Meaningful adaptations in hamstring strength and tendon stiffness typically develop over six to eight weeks of consistent training. Nordic curls show statistically significant injury-rate reductions when players complete a full six-week protocol. You will feel stronger and more resilient in the first two to three weeks, but the structural changes in the muscle and tendon that provide real protection take longer to consolidate.

Why do hamstring injuries happen more in the second half of a padel match?

Neuromuscular fatigue progressively reduces the speed and accuracy with which your nervous system can activate the hamstring during the explosive deceleration movements padel demands. A fatigued hamstring fires more slowly and with less coordination, meaning it cannot absorb sudden loads as effectively. This is why a proper warm-up, consistent in-season strength training, and adequate hydration during match play are all direct hamstring injury prevention strategies.

Part of the PadelRevive padel injury + recovery system. Built by players, for players.

Keep Reading

Scroll to Top