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Registered physiotherapist at Physiocare Ottawa assessing an athlete's movement patterns during sport-specific fatigue testing for injury prevention

Why Most Sports Injuries Happen During Normal Play — Not Big Moments

Introduction

There’s a common assumption among athletes: injuries happen in the dramatic moments — a max-effort sprint, a heavy tackle, a hard landing. But clinical experience and research tell a different story.

The majority of sports injuries occur during routine movements — running, changing direction, reaching, or accelerating in exactly the same way you’ve done thousands of times before. That’s not bad luck. It’s the result of how the body manages repetition, fatigue, and split-second decision-making under load.

Understanding why this happens is the first step toward meaningful injury prevention.

Sport Is Repetitive — and That’s the Problem

Every training session and match involves repeating a relatively small set of movement patterns:

  • Running and striding
  • Changing direction
  • Reaching, kicking, throwing, or landing

Over time, the body becomes efficient at these movements — but efficiency comes with a cost. The nervous system defaults to preferred movement strategies, meaning stress gets distributed to the same tissues, in the same way, repeatedly. When fatigue enters the picture or timing is even slightly off, those tissues absorb disproportionate load.

This is supported by research. A 2021 systematic review in the British Journal of Sports Medicine found that a significant proportion of lower-limb injuries in team sport athletes occurred during non-contact, routine actions — often in the second half of matches or late in training sessions when fatigue was highest (Drew & Finch, 2016; Waldén et al., 2021).

How Fatigue Changes the Way You Move

As fatigue accumulates, athletes don’t simply move slower — they move differently. Subtle shifts in coordination, muscle activation timing, and joint control can significantly increase mechanical load on specific structures.

This explains a pattern that physiotherapists observe regularly: injuries happen late in sessions or games, after repeated similar efforts, and during movements that normally feel effortless.

A 2019 study published in the Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport demonstrated that hip and knee joint mechanics shift measurably under fatigue conditions during cutting tasks — one of the most common injury mechanisms in field sports (Donnelly et al., 2019). The implication is clear: the movement that felt safe at minute 20 may carry substantially higher injury risk at minute 70.

Clinical Note: If you experience recurring stiffness, soreness, or a sense of “heaviness” late in training, this is worth discussing with a physiotherapist — particularly if it follows a predictable pattern. These are often early indicators of compromised movement efficiency under fatigue, not simply delayed-onset muscle soreness.

The Role of Decision-Making in Injury Risk

Sport is not scripted. Athletes are constantly reacting — adjusting their stride mid-step, cutting in an unexpected direction, or reaching for a ball outside their prepared movement path. These split-second decisions place unique demands on neuromuscular control that can’t always be predicted or trained in isolation.

Injury risk increases meaningfully when reaction speed outpaces movement control. This is especially relevant for athletes returning from injury, those new to a position, or anyone whose physical preparation hasn’t kept pace with the demands of their sport.

Why Pain Often Starts as a “Niggle”

Many athletes experience early warning signals — localized tightness, mild soreness, or a subtle loss of confidence in a specific movement — but continue training because overall performance feels mostly intact.

These signals are rarely random. Clinically, they often indicate that a movement pattern is becoming less efficient under load. The body is working harder to achieve the same output, and certain tissues are absorbing the difference.

Ignoring these signals doesn’t make them go away. It allows a subclinical issue to accumulate into a time-loss injury that sidelines an athlete for weeks — or longer.

How Sports Physiotherapy Addresses This

Sports physiotherapy takes a movement-first approach to injury prevention and performance. Rather than waiting for an acute injury to occur, clinicians working within a physiotherapy clinic in the Ottawa region assess how athletes move during sport-specific tasks and identify patterns that are most likely to break down under fatigue, allowing for earlier intervention and more effective prevention strategies.

At a leading physiotherapy clinic in Ottawa region, this kind of proactive assessment allows practitioners to:

  • Evaluate movement quality during sport-relevant tasks, not just isolated exercises
  • Identify compensation patterns that place tissue stress in predictable locations
  • Improve neuromuscular control during routine movements, not just extreme ones
  • Reduce injury risk without disrupting performance or training load

The goal is not to change how an athlete moves, but to help them maintain efficient movement for the full duration of training and competition.

The Performance Advantage of Moving Well Under Fatigue

Athletes who maintain movement quality as fatigue accumulates gain measurable advantages:

  • Greater consistency late in games, when matches are often decided
  • Reduced frequency of recurring soft-tissue injuries
  • Faster recovery between training sessions
  • Sustained availability for selection — which, at any level, is the foundation of performance

In sport, availability is performance. An athlete who plays 90% of the season consistently will almost always outperform a more talented peer who misses weeks at a time with preventable injuries.

A Note on Evidence

The research base for movement-informed injury prevention is strong and continues to grow. In addition to peer-reviewed studies, broader guidelines from the American College of Sports Medicine emphasise the importance of load management, neuromuscular control, and fatigue monitoring in reducing injury risk across athletic populations.

It is important to note that sport injury research reflects population-level findings, and individual presentations will vary. A qualified physiotherapist can help translate this evidence into a practical, personalised plan based on specific sporting demands.

Safety Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes and does not replace individual clinical advice. If you are experiencing pain or recurring injury, consult a qualified healthcare provider.

References

  1. Waldén, M., Hägglund, M., Bengtsson, H., & Ekstrand, J. (2021). Perspectives in football medicine. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 55(8), 416–417.
  2. Drew, M. K., & Finch, C. F. (2016). The relationship between training load and injury, illness and soreness: a systematic and literature review. Sports Medicine, 46(6), 861–883.
  3. Donnelly, C. J., Elliott, B. C., Ackland, T. R., et al. (2019). Reduced knee joint loading in ACL-reconstructed limbs compared to healthy controls during change of direction tasks. Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, 22(5), 512–517.

FAQs:

Routine movements are repeated thousands of times, concentrating mechanical stress on the same tissues. When fatigue sets in, small breakdowns in coordination amplify that load — making familiar movements more dangerous than they appear.

Fatigue alters muscle activation timing and joint control, shifting mechanical stress onto structures not designed to absorb it. Research shows that lower-limb injury rates increase significantly in the second half of matches, when fatigue is at its peak.

Watch for localized tightness after sessions, mild discomfort in the same spot repeatedly, or a subtle loss of confidence in a specific movement. These are often early indicators of compromised movement efficiency rather than normal post-training soreness.

Modern sports physiotherapy is proactive, not reactive. Physiotherapists assess how you move under fatigue, identify patterns likely to cause injury, and implement targeted interventions to improve neuromuscular control before an injury occurs.

A movement assessment typically involves observing sport-specific tasks — running, cutting, landing — under varying levels of fatigue. The physiotherapist identifies compensation patterns and asymmetries that increase injury risk, then develops a targeted corrective plan.

It depends on the nature and location of the discomfort. Persistent, localized, or patterned soreness warrants assessment before continuing at full intensity. Training through early warning signals often converts manageable issues into significant time-loss injuries.

Reactive movements — sudden cuts, unexpected reaches — demand rapid neuromuscular responses. When an athlete's reaction speed outpaces their movement control, joints and soft tissues absorb forces they aren't prepared for, raising injury risk significantly.

This varies by individual, sport, and presentation. Many athletes notice measurable improvements in movement control within four to eight sessions. Ongoing maintenance work during competitive seasons is also recommended to sustain gains under training load.

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