Guest post from: Velocity Sports Performance

Sprinting after a hamstring injury can be a challenge.

Rehabilitating a hamstring injury is not just about healing tissue—it’s about restoring high-performance movement while minimizing the risk of reinjury.

For field and court sport athletes, sprinting is often the final hurdle in the return-to-sport journey. But too often, athletes either sprint too soon or not soon enough.

This guide outlines how to progressively rebuild sprint capacity after a hamstring injury, grounded in current research and practitioner insights.

Why Sprinting Matters in Rehab

Hamstring strains are most commonly caused by high-speed running, particularly during the terminal swing phase when the hamstrings are under maximal length and force demands​.

Without targeted reconditioning of sprint mechanics, athletes may regain general strength but still be vulnerable during high-speed actions.

A return-to-sport framework that integrates sprinting—rather than delaying it—has been shown to reduce reinjury risk and improve functional outcomes​​.


Multi-Track Approach: Strength + Speed + Pliability

Effective rehab should follow a dual-track model that develops:

This integrated approach is now the standard for athletes A criteria-based progression, rather than a rigid timeline, should guide decisions​.

Guidelines for Sprinting After a Hamstring Injury

Three Keys to Sprint Progression After Hamstring Strain

  1. Start early—but not fast
    Light, coordinated movements such as straight-leg skips, thigh pops, and step-over runs (dribbles) can begin early to restore rhythm and posture without full speed demands.
  2. Build intensity gradually
    Sprint progression should move from 50% to 100% effort in stages, as outlined in Hickey et. al practical protocol. Rushing to maximal speed without earning capacity at submaximal levels is a common reinjury trap.
  3. Use criteria, not time
    Athletes should progress when they can sprint pain-free at the current intensity, demonstrate proper mechanics, and meet strength benchmarks (e.g., 90% limb symmetry in isometric or eccentric tests)​​.

What About Tendon or Stretch-Type Injuries?

Athletes recovering from hamstring tendon avulsions or stretch-type strains (often from kicking or overstretching) need slower and more cautious sprint reintroduction.

This also applies to athletes who have had multiple hamstring injuries.

These injuries require more time to build tolerance to lengthened positions and high-speed hip flexion-extension loads​​.


Final Word On Sprinting After A Hamstring Injury

Sprinting should not be treated as a final fitness test. It is a skill and a capacity that must be rebuilt intentionally.

By layering sprint drills, strength work, and progressive exposures to speed, we not only reduce the chance of reinjury—we rebuild the athlete for sustainable, long-term performance.

References

Adriana Geraci, Delaney Mahon, Eric Hu, Jesus E. Cervantes, Shane J. Nho, Prevention and Rehabilitation of the Athletic Hamstring Injury, Arthroscopy, Sports Medicine, and Rehabilitation, 2024,101021

Bramah, C., Mendiguchia, J., Dos’Santos, T. et al. Exploring the Role of Sprint Biomechanics in Hamstring Strain Injuries: A Current Opinion on Existing Concepts and Evidence. Sports Med (2023).

Danielsson A, Horvath A, Senorski C, Alentorn-Geli E, Garrett WE, Cugat R, Samuelsson K, Hamrin Senorski E. The mechanism of hamstring injuries–a systematic review. BMC musculoskeletal disorders. 2020 Dec;21:1-21.

Hickey JT, Opar DA, Weiss LJ, Heiderscheit BC. Hamstring Strain Injury Rehabilitation. J Athl Train. 2022 Feb 1;57(2):125-135

Mendiguchia J, Martinez-Ruiz E, Edouard P, Morin JB, Martinez-Martinez F, Idoate F, Mendez-Villanueva A. A multifactorial, criteria-based progressive algorithm for hamstring injury treatment. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2017 Jul 1;49(7):1482-92.

Schoenfeld BJ, Contreras B, Tiryaki-Sonmez G, Wilson JM, Kolber MJ, Peterson MD. Regional differences in muscle activation during hamstrings exercise. J Strength Cond Res. 2015 Jan;29(1):159-64