Hamstring Injury Rehab Drogheda at Physio Performance is something we deal with every single week — and if you have picked up a hamstring injury recently, you already know how deceptively tricky these injuries can be. One moment you are sprinting, the next you feel that sharp pull or pop at the back of your thigh. You rest it. It eases off. You go back to training. And within two weeks — sometimes less — it goes again.
Here is something worth thinking about. Your hamstring feels okay. Not 100% — but okay. And you are nearly ready to go back to training. Nearly. That “nearly” is the most dangerous place to be. Because a hamstring that feels okay at rest and a hamstring that is actually ready for full training are two completely different things. And the difference between them is the difference between a full recovery and a grade two tear that keeps you out for months.
This guide covers exactly what hamstring injuries involve, why they keep recurring, and what proper rehabilitation looks like from day one to full return to sport.
Hamstring injuries are the single most common injury in GAA football — accounting for almost one quarter of all injuries recorded in the National GAA Injury Database. They are also among the most frequently recurring. Research consistently shows that a previously injured hamstring is two to three times more likely to be re-injured than one that has never been hurt.
That statistic is not inevitable. It is what happens when hamstring injuries are not rehabbed properly.
The cycle is familiar to almost every GAA player and field sport athlete in Drogheda and Co. Louth. The hamstring gets injured. It is rested. The pain goes away. The player returns to training — sometimes too soon, sometimes after a reasonable period — and within weeks the same hamstring goes again. Often in the same spot. Sometimes worse.
The reason this cycle happens is not bad luck and it is not a weak hamstring. It is almost always one of three things: returning to full training before the hamstring has genuinely recovered its strength, returning without addressing the underlying weakness or movement patterns that caused the injury in the first place, or not having an objective measure of readiness — relying on how the hamstring feels rather than what it can actually do under load.
Rest makes the pain go away. It does not fix the hamstring. Proper rehabilitation does.
Not all hamstring injuries are the same. The grade of the injury, the specific location within the muscle, and whether it is a new injury or a recurrence all significantly affect the rehabilitation approach and the expected recovery timeline.
The hamstring muscle group consists of three muscles — the biceps femoris, the semimembranosus, and the semitendinosus — running from the ischial tuberosity at the base of the pelvis down to the back of the knee. Injuries can occur anywhere along this length but are most common at the musculotendinous junction — the point where the muscle transitions into tendon — and at the proximal tendon attachment near the sit bone.
Grades of hamstring injury:
Grade 1: A mild strain involving a small number of muscle fibres. The hamstring feels tight and uncomfortable but there is no significant loss of strength or range. Recovery with proper rehabilitation is typically 1 to 3 weeks.
Grade 2: A moderate partial tear involving a larger proportion of fibres. There is noticeable pain, localised bruising in many cases, and a clear reduction in strength. Recovery typically takes 4 to 8 weeks — but only with a properly structured rehabilitation programme. This is the grade most commonly mismanaged by returning too soon.
Grade 3: A severe tear involving most or all of the muscle fibres. Significant pain, bruising, and inability to use the leg normally. Rare but serious — requires comprehensive assessment and in some cases surgical review. Recovery can take 3 to 6 months.
Proximal hamstring tendinopathy: Pain at the sit bone — the bony prominence at the base of the pelvis. Not an acute tear but a gradual overload of the proximal hamstring tendon. Notoriously slow to respond to standard hamstring treatment and requires a very specific progressive loading approach.
Understanding which of these you are dealing with is not possible without a proper assessment — and getting it wrong leads directly to the re-injury cycle described above.
The first 48 to 72 hours after a hamstring injury are about managing the immediate response — controlling bleeding and inflammation within the muscle, protecting the tissue from further damage, and beginning to restore normal movement as quickly as is safely possible.
What happens in Stage 1:
The goal of Stage 1 is not recovery. It is preparation — getting the hamstring in the best possible condition to begin the progressive loading that drives genuine healing.
Once the acute phase has settled, the focus moves to rebuilding the strength foundation — progressively loading the hamstring in a controlled way that stimulates tissue healing without aggravating the injury.
This is where the most important principle in hamstring rehabilitation comes into play: progressive loading. The hamstring heals through load, not through rest. The research on this is unambiguous — tendons and muscles require mechanical stimulation to remodel properly. A hamstring that is rested for three weeks and then returned to sprinting has not been prepared for sprinting. It has simply been given time to feel better.
Key work in Stage 2:
Every patient at Physio Performance receives their rehabilitation programme through the Physitrack app — so the exercises, progressions, and targets are always clear between sessions, not just during them.
Return to running after a hamstring injury is one of the most critical transitions in the entire rehabilitation process — and one of the most commonly rushed.
Running clearance at Physio Performance is based on objective criteria, not time alone. The hamstring must demonstrate adequate strength and range of motion before any running begins. A hamstring that feels ready but cannot meet these criteria is not ready — regardless of how long it has been since the injury.
The running progression:
The most common mistake at this stage is progressing too quickly because the running feels fine at moderate pace. The hamstring is not fully tested at 70% speed. It is tested at 95% — and that is where the re-injuries happen when the preparation is not complete.
This is where Physio Performance has a genuine and significant advantage over every other physiotherapy clinic in the Louth and Meath area — the HRIG Hamstring Assessment device.
The HRIG — Hamstring Rehabilitation and Injury Guard — is a specialist assessment tool that measures the strength and force output of the hamstring at the specific angles and velocities that matter for sprinting. It provides objective data on exactly how ready the hamstring is for full training demands — not guesswork, not a feel test, actual measurable data.
At Physio Performance, we are the only clinic in the Louth and Meath area with access to this technology. And it fundamentally changes the return to sport decision for hamstring injuries — replacing “I think it feels ready” with “the data shows it is ready.”
What Stage 4 involves:
The VALD ForceDecks platform is also used at this stage to assess lower limb power symmetry — ensuring the injured leg is performing at a level comparable to the uninjured leg before return to full training is considered.
Return to full training is cleared only when the hamstring meets the objective criteria established through HRIG assessment and force plate testing — not when a set number of weeks has passed.
Clearance criteria at Physio Performance:
The player who meets these criteria and returns to training is in a fundamentally different position from the player who returns because it has been four weeks and the hamstring feels okay. One is ready. The other is hoping.
Proximal hamstring tendinopathy deserves a specific mention because it is one of the most commonly misdiagnosed and most frequently mistreated conditions we see at Physio Performance.
It presents as pain at the sit bone — deep in the buttock — that is worse when sitting for long periods, when running at speed, and particularly when doing any exercise that loads the hamstring in a lengthened position. Many people are told it is a hamstring strain and treated accordingly. It is not a strain. It is a tendinopathy — a degenerative overload condition of the proximal hamstring tendon — and it requires a completely different treatment approach.
The most important thing to know about proximal hamstring tendinopathy is what makes it worse: stretching. The instinct when something feels tight at the back of the thigh is to stretch it. For proximal hamstring tendinopathy, stretching compresses the already irritated tendon against the ischial tuberosity and significantly aggravates the condition. Many people spend months stretching a proximal hamstring tendinopathy and wondering why it is getting worse rather than better.
The treatment that works is progressive tendon loading — starting with isometric exercises and building systematically through isotonic and then high-load eccentric work over a period of weeks to months. It is a slow process. But when it is done correctly, the outcomes are excellent — including for people who have been struggling with sit bone pain for years.
According to the Irish Society of Chartered Physiotherapists, tendinopathy rehabilitation requires a structured, progressive loading programme delivered by a chartered physiotherapist — not generic exercises or prolonged rest.
For GAA players across Drogheda and Co. Louth, hamstring injuries represent the single biggest injury threat to their season. The demands of Gaelic football — explosive acceleration, repeated high-speed sprinting, aerial contests — place enormous load through the hamstring with every training session and every match.
The GAA season in Louth runs from early spring through to the summer championship — a long, demanding campaign that leaves very little time for proper rehabilitation if a hamstring goes early in the season. The player who rushes back, re-injures, rushes back again, and limps through the rest of the year is a story we see every season.
The player who gets a proper assessment, follows a properly structured programme, and uses objective testing to confirm readiness before returning — that player comes back fully and stays back.
Physio Performance works closely with GAA players at club and county level across Louth and the surrounding areas. Our team includes Conor — Senior Therapist and lead therapist for the Louth Senior Hurling Team and multiple underage county squads — who has specific expertise in managing high-demand athletic populations through injury and back to peak performance.
For our specialist hamstring assessment service using the only HRIG device in Louth and Meath, see our HRIG Hamstring Assessment page. For our free guide with practical hamstring injury advice you can use right now, download our Free Hamstring Injury Recovery Guide.
| Injury Grade | Typical Recovery Timeline | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Grade 1 strain | 1 to 3 weeks | Meets strength criteria before return |
| Grade 2 partial tear | 4 to 8 weeks | HRIG symmetry above 90% |
| Grade 3 severe tear | 3 to 6 months | Full criteria-based clearance |
| Proximal tendinopathy | 3 to 6 months | Progressive loading completed fully |
| Recurrent hamstring injury | Variable — often longer | Root cause identified and addressed |
These are general timelines. Individual recovery depends on the grade of the injury, how long it has been present, and whether the rehabilitation programme is followed consistently. The most important thing to understand is that timeline alone is never the measure of readiness. Objective strength and movement criteria always are.
If you have just picked up a hamstring injury, here is what to do right now while you arrange a proper assessment:
What you do in the first 48 hours after a hamstring injury matters. But what you do in the following 6 to 8 weeks matters far more.
At Physio Performance in Drogheda, we have been treating hamstring injuries for over 12 years — from mild grade 1 strains in recreational athletes to complex recurrent tears in county-level GAA players. Our approach combines thorough clinical assessment, evidence-based progressive rehabilitation, and — uniquely in this area — objective HRIG hamstring testing to confirm readiness before return to sport.
Every patient receives a personalised programme through the Physitrack app, with clear exercises and progressions at every stage. Our team communicates with you throughout your recovery — because knowing where you are in the process and what you are working toward is as important as the treatment itself.
You can download our Free Hamstring Injury Recovery Guide for practical advice right now, or book directly online — no GP referral needed.
A grade 1 hamstring strain typically recovers in 1 to 3 weeks with proper rehabilitation. A grade 2 partial tear takes 4 to 8 weeks. A grade 3 severe tear can take 3 to 6 months. Proximal hamstring tendinopathy — pain at the sit bone — typically requires 3 to 6 months of progressive loading to resolve. In all cases, return to full training should be based on meeting objective strength criteria, not on reaching a specific date on the calendar.
Recurrent hamstring injuries almost always come down to one of three things: returning to full training before the hamstring has genuinely recovered its strength, returning without addressing the underlying weakness or movement patterns that caused the original injury, or not having an objective measure of readiness. A hamstring that feels okay is not necessarily a hamstring that is ready for the demands of sprinting and field sport. Proper assessment and criteria-based return to sport are the only reliable way to break the re-injury cycle.
In the early stages of an acute hamstring strain — the first one to two weeks — aggressive stretching is not recommended and can slow healing by disrupting the repairing tissue. Gentle range of motion work is appropriate from early on, but this is different from stretching. For proximal hamstring tendinopathy specifically, stretching should be avoided entirely as it aggravates the condition by compressing the tendon against the bone.
The HRIG — Hamstring Rehabilitation and Injury Guard — is a specialist device that measures hamstring strength and force output at the specific angles relevant to sprinting. It provides objective data on how ready the hamstring is for return to sport — replacing feel-based judgements with measurable evidence. Physio Performance is the only clinic in the Louth and Meath area with access to this technology. It is particularly valuable for athletes who have had recurrent hamstring injuries or who are preparing to return from a significant grade 2 or grade 3 tear.
For most grade 1 and grade 2 hamstring strains, a thorough clinical assessment by an experienced physiotherapist provides all the information needed to establish the diagnosis and begin rehabilitation. MRI or ultrasound scanning is recommended for suspected grade 3 tears, for injuries involving the proximal tendon, and for injuries that are not progressing as expected through rehabilitation. A physiotherapist will advise you whether imaging is needed after your initial assessment.