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                Sports Massage - An Introduction  | 
             
            
              by: 
                Richard Lane  | 
             
            
              Sports Massage - An Introduction  
Copyright 2005 Richard Lane  
 
Many therapists offer Sports Massage on their “Massage  
Menu” yet few understand what  Sports Massage is about.  
When a client comes in requesting a Sports Massage, some  
therapists merely react by going in deep.  Sports Massage  
is so much more.  
   
Whilst Sports Massage does have some aims in common with  
other forms of massage therapy, the usual experience in  
conventional massage is to aim to restore the normal  
function when someone is injured.  But in sport there is no  
‘normal’ and athletes are always looking to improve and  
gain a competitive edge.  Most athletes aim to reach a  
level of performance they can never achieve.   
 
A Sports Massage therapist has great potential to assist  
the athlete to become better, rather than merely normal.  
In striving to be better, the athlete attempts to  
systematically increase the level of training and thereby  
subjecting the body to gradual and controlled overuse.  
This overuse can often create imbalances and problems in  
the soft tissues, which if ignored may become chronic.  
Clearly this may hinder the athlete’s performance and/or  
rate of improvement.   Sports Massage can become a key  
ingredient in an athlete’s success and this is why top  
competitors incorporate it as an integral part of their  
training regime.  
 
So what is Sports Massage?  McGillicuddy(1) defines Sports  
Massage as “the specific application of massage techniques,  
hydrotherapy protocols, range of motion/flexibility  
protocol and strength-training principles utilized to  
achieve a specific goal when treating athletes”.  He  
considers that there are three principles that are vital to  
understanding what type of Sports Massage to apply to an  
athlete at any given time.  These principles are:  
 Timing  
 Technique and  
 Intent  
 
The timing of Sports Massage is related to when the massage  
is applied, is it pre-event or post-event, during a  
maintenance period or possibly post-injury when  
rehabilitation is required.  The technique refers to what  
massage/stretching/strengthening methods the therapists  
employs to attempt to achieve the intent, the desired  
outcome.  
 
The intent of pre-event massage is to warm up the muscles  
and to get blood flowing through the muscles.  The massage  
techniques generally used are petrissage, vibration,  
percussion, compression, muscle broadening strokes, etc.  
With post-event massage, the intent is assist in the  
recovery process by increasing venous and lymphatic  
circulation to assist with removal of metabolic by-products  
and thereby decreasing muscle soreness so that the athlete  
can return to full training faster.  The massage techniques  
would include effleurage, compression, petrissage, passive  
movements and light stretching.  The intent of maintenance  
massage is to keep the athletes muscles and tissue in  
optimum condition and is generally scheduled at a regular  
frequency (be it weekly or fortnightly), closely married to  
the athlete’s training program.  
 
Thus Sports Massage is not about going deep nor it is  
learning one technique.  The requirement for the therapist  
is to apply the appropriate treatment at the appropriate  
time,  which takes education, skill and experience.  
 
 
 
(1) M. McGillicuddy.  “Three Key Principles of Sports  
Massage”.  MassageToday.com May 2003, Volume03 Issue 05.  
 
 
 
----------------------------------------------------  
Richard Lane is a qualified remedial and sports massage  
therapist, with a mobile massage practice in Sydney's Inner  
West (www.innerwestmassage.com.au or  
info@innerwestmassage.com.au).  Health fund rebates. ATMS  
13020  
  
 | 
 
Richard Lane is a qualified remedial and sports massage  
therapist, with a mobile massage practice in Sydney's Inner  
West (www.innerwestmassage.com.au or  
info@innerwestmassage.com.au).  Health fund rebates. ATMS  
13020  
 
  
Contact him at http://www.innerwestmassage.com.au
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