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Blog, Physiotherapy

How to Avoid Common Summer Sports Injuries This Season

Volleyball in the sunset is a sport where you can see common summer sports injuries

Summer is when many people finally have the time and motivation to get active. Unfortunately, it’s also when we see a predictable spike in sports injuries in physiotherapy clinics.


This isn’t because people are doing the “wrong” sport — it’s usually because their body wasn’t prepared for the sudden change in load.


The most common summer sports injuries we see

Across running, cycling, swimming, surfing, social sport, and gym-based training, the most frequent injuries include:

  • Calf and hamstring strains
  • Achilles and patellar tendinopathy
  • Plantar heel pain
  • Shoulder pain (particularly from swimming, surfing, or paddle sports)
  • Ankle sprains
  • Lower back pain

Many of these injuries are not acute accidents — they develop gradually over weeks as tissues struggle to keep up.


Why summer injuries are so common

1. Sudden spikes in activityMan with knee bandage on tennis court experiencing summer sports injuries.

A classic scenario:

  • Minimal activity for months
  • Holiday period begins
  • Training volume or intensity doubles overnight

Muscles, tendons, and joints adapt slowly. When load increases faster than tissue capacity, injury risk rises sharply.

2. Heat and fatigue

Hot conditions increase fatigue and dehydration, which can:

  • Reduce coordination
  • Increase muscle strain risk
  • Delay recovery between sessions

Fatigue often changes movement patterns before people realise it.

3. Poor strength base

Many summer sports are power and endurance heavy, but people often return to them without adequate strength preparation — especially for calves, hamstrings, hips, and shoulders.

4. Reduced recovery

Late nights, travel, alcohol, and disrupted sleep all impair tissue recovery — even if training volume stays the same.


Why “just resting” often doesn’t solve the problem

When pain appears, people often stop activity completely. While this can settle symptoms short term, it doesn’t address the underlying issue: reduced load tolerance.

When activity resumes, pain often returns — sometimes worse than before.


A physiotherapy approach to injury prevention

Rather than avoiding sport, physiotherapy focuses on:

  • Gradually rebuilding tissue capacity
  • Improving movement efficiency
  • Strengthening vulnerable areas
  • Managing weekly load

Key principles include:

  • Increasing training volume by no more than ~10–15% per week
  • Strength training alongside sport
  • Addressing niggles early, not ignoring them

The takeaway

Most summer injuries are load-management problems, not structural failures. With the right preparation, most people can stay active all summer without breaking down.

If you’ve picked up an injury or want to stay active and pain-free this summer, book an appointment with one of our experienced physios. Call us on 1800 992 999 or book online today.


Marinus Du Preez M Physio Sydney Written By:

Marinus Du Preez (Principal Physiotherapist)

Bachelor of Health Science (Physiotherapy)


 

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