Volleyball Injury Clinics in Port Colborne, 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 17 active sports and physiotherapy clinics in Port Colborne below.
17 clinics in Port Colborne
380 Elm St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 4P2, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
218 Catharine St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 4K8, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
285 Main St W, Port Colborne, ON L3K 6A6, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
265 Main St W, Port Colborne, ON L3K 3V7, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
Elgin St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 6G9, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
222 West St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 4E3, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
260 Sugarloaf St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 2N9, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
200 Catharine St Suite 202, Port Colborne, ON L3K 4K8, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
260 Sugarloaf St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 2N7, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
301 Mitchell St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 1Y7, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
380 Elm St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 4P2, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
550 Elizabeth St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 5W3, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
118 West St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 0B9, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
19 Shamrock Ave, Port Colborne, ON L3K 6B6, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
beside BEER store, 408 Catharine St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 4L5, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
52 Elizabeth St, Port Colborne, ON L3K 2B6, Canada
Port Colborne, ON
Common Volleyball injuries treated in Port Colborne
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.
FAQs β Volleyball Injuries in Port Colborne
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.