Allow Your Body to Recover Like a Professional Athlete

Jefit App
5 min readJul 23, 2021

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Look no further than NBA or WNBA games and you’ll see athletes using various tools on the sidelines trying to help their bodies recover. Following NFL games, football players are known for taking ice baths, getting massages, hitting the pool and rolling out to aid recovery. Of course, all the critical recovery work begins in the locker room following a game.

Professional teams invest a ton of money on strength & conditioning coaches, nutritionist, massage therapist, yoga gurus, you name it. I have known more than one person who works with professional athletes doing massage. All to help improve performance, yes, but also to help athletes recover from the cumulative stress of practices and games.

Allow your body to recover like a professional athlete. You may not be able to have a cryotherapy chamber in your home like Lebron James does. But you can use the following recovery products regularly, just like he and other athletes do.

Recover Like a Professional Athlete

Rolling Tools: Foam Roller, Tennis/Lacrosse Balls, T-Pin Vector

There is a great deal of research showing positive outcomes when someone uses a foam roller as a recovery tool. These types of products work on releasing tight, restrictive fascia and muscle. Fascia, along with tendons and ligaments, are what make up the bodies connective tissue. Muscles that are tight are not only an accident waiting to happen, they also impede performance. A tight athlete does not see the field as much as the bench, because they’re usually dealing with injuries.

All of these recovery “tools” mentioned are not very expensive and do a great job helping the body recover. In the long run, you end up getting a lot of bang for your buck with each of these products.

Foam Roller

Foam rollers have been gaining popularity since hitting the mainstream thanks to physical therapists. Spend a few minutes rolling out all your major muscle groups. Begin rolling your calf muscles, moving to the hamstrings, glutes and back. The rollover and roll the lower leg, quadriceps and chest. Spend those 2–3 minutes rolling out each muscle group at a rate one inch per second. When you come across a tight area, stop rolling and stay on it, letting the pressure from your bodyweight and foam roller knead into the facia.

Use Tennis, Lacrosse, Golf Balls to Recover

You probably already have a few of these items lying around the house. Grab one of those tennis balls and sit on it. Try rolling out your tight glutes, eventually transitioning to your side targeting your glute medius. Magic! Right? Next, put two tennis balls in a sock and make sure both balls are tight together. This turns into an instant deep tissue massage product. It works great when you lie on the balls — known as a “peanut” — now, rollout your cervical, thoracic and lumbar areas. Let the balls push into or knead your paraspinal muscles (also known as your erector spinae). Rollout about an inch/second, traveling from your cervical down to your lumbar area. As you hit a tight area (“trigger point”), stop, breath into it and hang out there for a few minutes before proceeding. You may need to commit more time initially using these tools in order to bring back your body to help it recover fully.

T-Pin Vector

This is a favorite product for a lot of people. The T-Pin Vector might not be very big (pictured above on the right) but it is ideal for getting into small, tight areas on your body. Also, works amazingly well when targeting the neck and feet, say bye-bye to plantar fasciitis.

Recovery Tools: Massage Guns, Heating Pads, Compression Sleeves

Massage Guns

Massage guns are one of the hottest recovery tools on the market today. Personally, I have tried a few, Theragun and Hyperice (pictured above left). They are used ideally as part of your dynamic warm-up prior to your workout as well as post workout to help you recover. Hyperice also has a great app associated with their products that have informational tutorials from industry experts like Kelly Starret, DPT.

Heating Pads & Wraps

Heating pads can used to promote blood flow to help release tight areas of the body. Some companies like, Hyperice, have even combined heat with vibration technology in their line of Venom products (above right photo).

Compression Sleeves

You have seen runners, basketball players and others wear compress sleeves on either their arm and/or leg. A leg compression sleeve basically usesgraduated pressure to aid in easing discomfort and pain. They are an effective treatment for restless leg syndrome, shin splints, leg cramps, plantar fasciitis, among other conditions.

Many different companies have now gotten into the game with the same premise but offering more high tech. Some products like Hyperice Normatec (pictured above middle) is bluetooth connected, offers seven different intensity levels, and you can customize the areas of the body part regarding time and pressure.

We have introduced a few recovery products to help your body recover that are popular with the fitness industry today. There are many other traditional and high tech products that are also available depending on your budget. For those looking to keep it simple, though, stick to cryotherapy (ice bucket, ice packs or ice baths post workout). Use a foam roller as a preventative measure and don’t forget about a really beneficial, old school treatment. It is typically for your feet but also great for the entire body, an Epsom salt soak mixed in warm water. This product is inexpensive, works wonders after a long run, after a tough workout or when you’re on your feet all day.

Try the Award-Winning Jefit App

Try Jefit app, named best app for 2020 and 2021 by PC Magazine, Men’s Health, The Manual and the Greatist. The app comes equipped with a customizable workout planner and training log. The app has ability to track data, offer audio cues, and features to share workouts with friends. Take advantage of Jefit’s exercise database for your strength workouts. Visit our members-only Facebook group. Connect with like-minded people, share tips, and advice to help get closer to reaching your fitness goals. Try one of the new interval-based workouts and add it to your weekly training schedule. Stay strong with Jefit as you live your sustainable fitness lifestyle.

Originally published at https://www.jefit.com on July 23, 2021.

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Jefit App
Jefit App

Written by Jefit App

A mobile fitness app for Android & iOS devices that manages & tracks your workout. More than 12.5 million downloads. Michael Wood, CSCS, is the Content Manager.