Patient Resources and Articles

Hydro Athletes

Hydrotherapy for Sports Rehabilitation: Getting Athletes Back, Better

May 18, 20265 min read

Hydrotherapy for Sports Rehabilitation: Getting Athletes Back, Better

One of the hardest parts of sports rehab isn’t strength.

It’s timing.

Knowing when to push…
when to hold back…
and how to rebuild performance without stepping over the line too early.

Because most athletes don’t struggle with effort, they struggle with uncertainty.

Am I doing enough?
Am I doing too much?
Why does this still feel off?

And this is where hydrotherapy becomes more than just “rehab in water.”

It becomes a way to keep progressing, even when the body isn’t ready for full load yet.


Hydrotherapy isn’t just an early-stage tool.

In sport, it plays a role right through rehab, because it allows you to train around limitations, not just wait for them to disappear.

And that comes down to what water changes.


1. It allows earlier movement without compromising healing

After injuries like ACL reconstruction, there’s a period where the joint simply can’t tolerate full load.

But doing nothing isn’t the answer either.

Water creates that middle ground.

Because of buoyancy, athletes can:

  • Walk earlier with better mechanics

  • Begin gait retraining sooner

  • Restore range of motion more comfortably

All without exposing the knee to full body weight.


2. It maintains conditioning when you’d otherwise lose it

One of the biggest performance drops post-injury isn’t strength, it’s fitness.

And it declines quickly.

Hydrotherapy gives you a way to maintain it:

  • Deep water running

  • Interval-based conditioning in the pool

  • Continuous aerobic work without joint stress

Research shows this can maintain aerobic capacity and running performance, even when weight-bearing training isn’t possible.

So when you return to land, you’re not rebuilding everything from scratch.


3. It helps rebuild movement quality, not just muscle

Strength matters, but movement quality is what keeps athletes healthy.

After injury, compensations creep in:

  • Offloading one side

  • Poor control through range

  • Altered timing and coordination

Water allows earlier reintroduction of:

  • Squatting patterns

  • Lunging

  • Controlled single-leg work

All in a way that reduces fear and improves control.

So instead of waiting to “earn” movement, you start practising it earlier, just in a different environment.


4. It creates a safer entry point into power and impact

This is where hydrotherapy really stands out.

On land, plyometrics can expose the body to forces of 2–6x body weight.

In water, those forces are reduced by around 45–60%.

That means you can introduce:

  • Jumping

  • Landing

  • Change-of-direction patterns

…earlier, and with significantly less joint stress.

It’s not about avoiding load, it’s about progressing toward it more intelligently.


5. It helps manage load across the entire rehab process

Load management is everything in sports rehab.

Too little → deconditioning
Too much → setbacks

Water gives you flexibility:

  • Add volume without overloading joints

  • Maintain training frequency

  • Use it as recovery or conditioning between heavier sessions

Especially in later stages, this becomes a key advantage.

To make this practical, let’s look at how hydrotherapy fits into a typical ACL rehabilitation timeline, particularly the first 3-4 months, where most of the foundation is built.


Phase 1: Early stage (Weeks 2-4) “Restore movement and confidence”

This is where everything still feels limited.

  • Swelling is present

  • Range of motion is restricted

  • Walking may still feel unnatural

Hydrotherapy focuses on:

  • Gait retraining → practising normal walking patterns with reduced load

  • Range of motion work → bending and straightening the knee more comfortably

  • Early muscle activation → quads, glutes, calf engagement

  • Light conditioning → deep water walking, swimming or gentle aerobic work

The key here isn’t intensity, it’s quality.

Getting movement back early, and getting it right.


Phase 2: Mid stage (Weeks 4-8) “Build strength + reintroduce running patterns”

At this stage, things are improving, but the knee still isn’t ready for high load.

This is where hydrotherapy becomes a real performance tool.

You can start:

  • Deep water running → maintaining fitness and reintroducing running mechanics

  • Functional strength work → squats, lunges, step patterns in water

  • Balance + control drills → single-leg stability, controlled movement

  • Progressive conditioning → intervals, sustained aerobic work

Importantly, you’re not just getting stronger, you’re rebuilding how you move.

And because load is reduced, you can do more of it, more often.


Phase 3: Late mid-stage (Weeks 8-16) “Return to running + introduce impact”

This is where things start to feel more like “training” again. On land, you might just be returning to:

  • Straight-line running

  • Controlled gym-based strength

In the pool, you can go a step further. This might include:

  • Running progressions in water (increasing speed and intensity)

  • Early plyometric drills → double-leg jumping, controlled landing

  • Introduction of hopping patterns (lower load, higher control)

  • Multi-directional movement drills

Because water reduces impact forces, you can:

  • Practise these earlier

  • Refine technique

  • Build confidence before transferring to land

It essentially acts as a bridge between strength and performance.


Throughout all phases, conditioning never stops. One of the biggest advantages across this entire timeline:

You never fully lose your fitness. Conditioning can be layered in from early on:

  • Low-level aerobic work → early stage

  • Structured intervals → mid stage

  • High-intensity efforts → later stages

So when athletes return to running on land… They’re not just physically ready, they’re conditioned, coordinated, and confident.

The difference between a good rehab and a great one often comes down to continuity.

Not stopping and starting. Not waiting for the “perfect time.” But finding ways to keep progressing, even when limitations are still there.

Hydrotherapy allows that. It fills the gaps:

  • Between rest and training

  • Between strength and performance

  • Between early rehab and return to sport

Because in the end, it’s not just about getting back on the field. It’s about getting back ready, with movement that’s stronger, cleaner, and more resilient than before.

Adam Walker, a passionate physiotherapist and director at Gold Coast Knee Group, focuses on knee pain and injury rehabilitation. He has completed his PhD at Bond University, and currently works clinically, teaches at Bond, and engages in knee research.

Adam Walker

Adam Walker, a passionate physiotherapist and director at Gold Coast Knee Group, focuses on knee pain and injury rehabilitation. He has completed his PhD at Bond University, and currently works clinically, teaches at Bond, and engages in knee research.

Back to Blog

Contact Details

Bond Institute of Health and Sport Robina, (Next to Cbus Super Stadium) Ground Level, 2 Promethean Way, Gold Coast, QLD, 4226

Follow Us

Copyright 2026 Gold Coast Knee Group

Website & Marketing Powered By Gymini