Proprioception

The body’s invisible sixth sense — and the reason ankle injuries keep coming back without proper retraining.

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The PadelRevive Team
Padel Performance Coaches · Updated May 2026
30-70ms

Response time — trained athlete proprioception vs 100ms+ in sedentary adults

40%

Proprioception loss — how much local ankle sense drops after a single sprain without retraining

35%

Re-injury reduction — after 8 weeks of balance and proprioception training

In short: proprioception is your body’s ability to know where it is in space without looking. It is a live feed from your muscles, tendons, and joints to your brain. When it works well, you land safely and change direction without thinking. When it breaks down — after an ankle sprain or through sedentary ageing — you are on borrowed time before the next injury. The good news is it responds extremely well to the right training.

What Is Proprioception?

Proprioception (pronounced pro-pree-oh-SEP-shun) is your nervous system’s ability to sense your body’s position, movement, and the force it is exerting — without relying on vision. It is sometimes called the sixth sense, though technically it is a collection of sensory signals from several receptor types in your muscles, tendons, and joints.
When you catch yourself stumbling on uneven ground and recover without falling, that is proprioception. When a padel player lands from a smash and automatically adjusts to an unexpected surface angle, that is proprioception. It operates at speeds that conscious thought cannot match — most proprioceptive corrections happen in under 70 milliseconds, well below the threshold of awareness.
The term comes from the Latin proprius (one’s own) and capio (to take). It was first formally described by physiologist Charles Sherrington in 1906, who identified it as a distinct sensory system separate from the five classical senses.

The Three Main Receptor Types

Three groups of mechanoreceptors are responsible for the majority of proprioceptive signalling in the human body:
Muscle Spindles

Located within muscle fibres, these detect changes in muscle length and the rate of change. They fire rapidly when a muscle is stretched, signalling how far and how fast a joint is moving. During a padel split step, muscle spindles in your calf and peroneals are the primary sensors for detecting sudden ankle displacement.

Golgi Tendon Organs (GTOs)

Embedded at the junction between muscle and tendon, GTOs detect force and tension. They protect against excessive load by triggering muscle relaxation when tension becomes dangerously high. They also feed back information about the load your joints are currently bearing — critical for calibrating shot power in padel.

Joint Mechanoreceptors

Located in joint capsules and ligaments, these detect joint position, velocity, and pressure. The ankle joint is particularly dense with mechanoreceptors because of the evolutionary importance of foot-ground contact for balance and locomotion. These are the receptors most damaged by ankle sprains.

Why Proprioception Matters for Padel Specifically

Padel places unusually high proprioceptive demands on players for three reasons. First, the sport involves frequent rapid direction changes — the court forces lateral acceleration and deceleration every 2-4 seconds during a competitive rally. Each direction change requires the ankle and knee to absorb force and redirect momentum safely.
Second, padel involves landing mechanics from overhead shots, particularly the smash. Players regularly jump and land on artificial turf that may be uneven, damp, or worn. Without strong ankle proprioception, these landings are a common mechanism for sprain.
Third, the fence and glass collisions that occur in padel are impossible to predict. A player backing into the glass to retrieve a lob must trust their body’s sense of position relative to the wall without being able to look behind them. That is proprioception under time pressure — precisely what the training exercises below are designed to build.
Ankle sprains are the most common padel injury — proprioception retraining is why they keep recurring
Read the ankle injury guide

How Proprioception Training Works Neurologically

Proprioception training does not build strength in the traditional sense. It trains your motor neuron pathways to fire faster and more accurately in response to joint perturbation. The mechanism is neural plasticity: repeated exposure to unstable or challenging joint positions forces the nervous system to recruit stabilising muscles more quickly and more precisely.
Each time you stand on a wobble board and catch yourself before tilting too far, you are reinforcing a motor response loop. The sensory signal from your ankle mechanoreceptors travels to the spinal cord, which can trigger a reflexive stabilising contraction in the peroneal muscles before the signal even reaches the brain. Over hundreds of repetitions, this spinal-level reflex becomes faster — which is why trained athletes show proprioceptive response times of 30-70ms versus 100ms or more in untrained individuals.
Eight weeks of consistent balance and proprioception training is enough to produce measurable improvements in ankle stability and reduces re-sprain risk in athletes returning from injury. This is the biological basis for every ankle rehab protocol that includes single-leg balance work.

Simple Proprioception Tests You Can Do Now

The Romberg Test: Stand with your feet together and arms crossed over your chest. Close your eyes. A healthy proprioceptive system should allow you to maintain this position for 30 seconds without significant sway. Excessive movement or loss of balance indicates reduced proprioceptive acuity (often worse in older players or those with prior ankle injuries).
Single-Leg Balance Test: Stand on one leg with your eyes open. Hold for 60 seconds. Repeat with eyes closed — this removes the visual compensation and forces the test to rely purely on proprioception. Most recreational padel players can do 30-40 seconds eyes-open but struggle past 10 seconds eyes-closed on their weaker ankle. Post-sprain, that number often drops to under 5 seconds.
Star Excursion Balance Test (SEBT): Stand on one leg and reach as far as possible in 8 directions (front, back, left, right, and the four diagonals) while maintaining single-leg balance. Asymmetry of more than 10-15% between legs is associated with elevated injury risk in court sport athletes.

Training Tools and Equipment

Proprioception training requires unstable surfaces that force your joints to self-correct in real time. The most commonly used tools are:
Wobble Board

A circular board on a dome or hemisphere. The classic entry-level tool. Inexpensive and effective for ankle and knee proprioception. Begin two-legged, progress to single-leg, then add arm movements or ball catch.

Foam Pad

Softer than a wobble board and less intimidating post-injury. The compressed foam surface absorbs and delays stabilisation feedback, training slower correction arcs. Excellent for early-stage rehab.

BOSU Ball

Flat side up creates a more challenging surface than a wobble board. Dome side up is more forgiving. The BOSU allows squat, lunge, and rotational loading — making it more sport-specific for padel than a simple balance board.

How Proprioception Declines With Age and Injury

Proprioceptive acuity peaks in your mid-20s and then gradually declines. Joint mechanoreceptors become less sensitive, motor neuron conduction speeds slow, and the brain’s processing of sensory input becomes less efficient. By age 60, proprioceptive function can be 20-30% below peak levels in the absence of regular training — which is one reason older padel players are disproportionately represented in ankle sprain statistics.
Injury accelerates this decline locally. A single moderate ankle sprain can reduce local proprioceptive acuity by up to 40% in the affected joint. The ligaments that are torn or stretched contain mechanoreceptors — those receptors are damaged along with the structural tissue. If the joint heals mechanically (the ligament regains tensile strength) but the proprioceptive system is not retrained, the player returns to court with a structurally repaired but neurologically deficient ankle. This is why recurrent ankle sprains are so common: the joint fails not because it is weak, but because it cannot sense quickly enough to self-protect.
The same principle applies after knee surgery. ACL reconstruction specifically addresses this — the ACL itself contains a high density of mechanoreceptors, so ACL reconstruction rehab protocols always include extensive balance and proprioception work, not just strength training.

Padel-Specific Proprioception Drills

The following drills are progressions. Start at the beginning of the list and advance when each drill feels stable and controlled. Each session should last 10-15 minutes, 3-4 times per week.
  1. Eyes-closed single-leg stand: 3 x 30 seconds per leg on a firm surface. Deliberately introduces proprioceptive isolation (removes visual input). Progress to 45 then 60 seconds.
  2. Wobble board two-leg balance: 3 x 45 seconds. Focus on keeping the board edge off the floor. Once stable, close your eyes.
  3. Wobble board single-leg balance: 3 x 30 seconds per leg, eyes open then eyes closed. The standard rehab benchmark is 30 seconds eyes-closed without significant board contact.
  4. BOSU squat with racket catch: Stand on BOSU dome (flat side down), perform slow squats while a partner throws a padel ball for you to catch and return. Introduces perturbation during loading — more sport-specific than static balance.
  5. Reactive lateral step: Stand on one leg. A partner calls left or right, and you take an explosive lateral step in that direction, landing softly on the moving foot and holding balance for 2 seconds. Mimics court movement under cognitive load.
  6. Blind wall retrieval walk: Walk backwards slowly toward the glass wall, stopping when you feel glass contact with your back or arm — without turning to look. Trains spatial body awareness specific to padel.
These drills form the core of the ankle rehab program — see the structured 6-week plan
View ankle rehab program
You know the feeling of rolling your ankle, resting for two weeks, and then doing it again within a month of returning. Most amateur players don’t realise the joint healed but the wiring did not. What actually works is rebuilding the sensory system, not just waiting for the pain to go away.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is proprioception in simple terms?

Proprioception is your body’s ability to know where it is and what it is doing without looking. It is the sense that lets you walk upstairs in the dark or catch your balance on an uneven surface without conscious thought. It comes from receptors in your muscles, tendons, and joint capsules that continuously send position and movement signals to your nervous system.

How does proprioception affect ankle injury risk in padel?

After an ankle sprain, the mechanoreceptors in the ankle ligaments are damaged. This reduces the ankle’s ability to sense and react to rapid position changes. The structural ligament may heal within 6-8 weeks, but the proprioceptive deficit can persist for months without specific retraining. Players who return to padel with this deficit are significantly more likely to sprain the same ankle again.

How long does proprioception training take to show results?

Measurable improvements in balance and reactive stability typically appear within 3-4 weeks of consistent training (3 sessions per week). The 35% reduction in re-injury risk cited in rehabilitation research is generally based on 8-week intervention programmes. Maintenance training (1-2 sessions per week) sustains the gains long-term.

What is the difference between proprioception and balance?

Balance is the outcome — staying upright. Proprioception is the sensory mechanism that makes balance possible. You can have decent balance using mostly visual input (keeping your eyes fixed on a reference point), but true proprioception functions even with eyes closed. Sports performance depends on proprioception because visual attention is usually directed at the ball and opponents, not at your own feet.

Does proprioception decline with age, and can older padel players retrain it?

Yes and yes. Proprioceptive acuity naturally declines from the mid-20s onwards, and this accelerates after 50. However, it responds well to training at any age. Studies of older adults show that 10-12 weeks of progressive balance training produces substantial improvements in proprioceptive function and reduced fall risk. For padel players over 50, including balance and stability work in weekly training is one of the highest-return injury prevention investments available.

Can I train proprioception at home without equipment?

Yes. The most effective no-equipment drill is eyes-closed single-leg standing. Start with 20 seconds per leg, progress to 45 seconds, then add small perturbations (gently shift your weight forward and back). A folded yoga mat or a firm cushion can substitute for a foam pad. Even stair edge standing (balls of feet on step, heels in air) trains ankle proprioception through controlled dorsiflexion challenge.

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