Volleyball Injury Clinics in Concord, Ontario
Shoulder and knee overuse injuries dominate volleyball rehab in Canada.
Volleyball's combination of overhead attacking, repetitive jumping, and hard floor landings creates chronic overuse injuries in the shoulder and knee. Beach volleyball adds lower back and ankle injuries from sand surface instability. Rotator cuff impingement, patellar tendinopathy, and finger injuries from blocking are the most common reasons Canadian volleyball players seek physiotherapy. Browse 14 active sports and physiotherapy clinics in Concord below.
Sport-specific clinic guide
Finding volleyball injury care in Concord
Concord has 14 clinics suited to volleyball injuries β worth prioritizing over general clinics if you train or compete regularly.
The most frequent volleyball complaints are back pain, knee pain & injury, shoulder pain & injury, ankle sprain & injury, plantar fasciitis, shin splints. Effective care usually combines physiotherapy, chiropractic, massage therapy, sports medicine, kinesiology tape with progressive loading and a clear return-to-play plan.
Highly rated volleyball clinic options in Concord
Patient decision checklist
Compare volleyball injury care clinics in Concord by the details patients usually check first
A good first pass for volleyball injury care in Concord is to look for clinics with clear contact information, visit hours, coverage details, accessibility notes, and recent patient feedback.
Fit Culture Inc.
#17, 50 Viceroy Rd, Concord, ON L4K 3A7, Canada, Concord
MBS Fitness & Rehabilitation
8461 Keele St #31, Concord, ON L4K 1Z6, Canada, Concord
Iron 97 Strength & Rehabilitation
25 Edilcan Dr Unit 10A, Concord, ON L4K 3S4, Canada, Concord
Lifemark Physiotherapy Maple
2200 Rutherford Rd Unit 12, Concord, ON L4K 5V2, Canada, Concord
14 clinics in Concord
1520 Steeles Ave W #105, Concord, ON L4K 3B9, Canada
Concord, ON
3120 Rutherford Rd #5, Concord, ON L4K 0B1, Canada
Concord, ON
37 Jacob Keffer Pkwy, Concord, ON L4K 5N8, Canada
Concord, ON
9200 Dufferin St #2, Concord, ON L4K 0C6, Canada
Concord, ON
#17, 50 Viceroy Rd, Concord, ON L4K 3A7, Canada
Concord, ON
80 Glen Shields Ave Unit 15, Concord, ON L4K 1T7, Canada
Concord, ON
25 Edilcan Dr Unit 10A, Concord, ON L4K 3S4, Canada
Concord, ON
665 Millway Ave #44, Concord, ON L4K 3T8, Canada
Concord, ON
2200 Rutherford Rd Unit 12, Concord, ON L4K 5V2, Canada
Concord, ON
8461 Keele St #31, Concord, ON L4K 1Z6, Canada
Concord, ON
2200 Rutherford Rd Unit 201, Concord, ON L4K 5V2, Canada
Concord, ON
37 Jacob Keffer Pkwy Unit 201, Concord, ON L4K 5N8, Canada
Concord, ON
2180 Hwy 7 #16, Concord, ON L4K 1W6, Canada
Concord, ON
Common Volleyball injuries treated in Concord
Trusted by Canadian Physios
The tape your physio uses β now at home
Canadian sports clinics trust TapeGeeks for kinesiology tape, athletic tape, and taping supplies. The same professional quality is available for athletes and patients to use at home.
Training and events near Concord
Many athletes in the Golden Horseshoe train between clinic visits. These free tools and local races can help you stay consistent while you recover.
RunMate Pro
Track mileage, monitor training load, and spot overuse patterns before a small ache becomes a clinic visit β built for Canadian runners.
Explore RunMate Pro βBronte Harbour Classic
A waterfront 5K and kids' run in Oakville β a friendly goal race for GTA runners building back after physio clearance.
View race details βAlso search nearby GTA volleyball clinic markets
FAQs β Volleyball Injuries in Concord
Why do volleyball players get so many shoulder injuries?
The overhead attacking motion in volleyball requires extreme shoulder external rotation and generates high forces on the rotator cuff with every spike. Over a season, this repeated loading causes rotator cuff impingement, labral irritation, and shoulder instability. Early physiotherapy and rotator cuff strengthening prevents these from becoming serious injuries.
How is volleyball knee pain (jumper's knee) treated?
Patellar tendinopathy in volleyball players is treated with heavy slow resistance training focused on eccentric loading of the patellar tendon, combined with load management during the season. In-season management differs from off-season treatment. An experienced sports physio will tailor the approach to your competition schedule.