APEX PWR | Champions Circle
An ACL Comeback in Progress: Inside Return-to-Sport Rehab
Key Takeaways
- One of our local high school basketball athletes is five months into her ACL rehab, and she has earned this spotlight through consistent, disciplined work.
- A strong ACL recovery is a long game. Modern practice favors criteria-based progression, meeting strength and movement benchmarks, over returning on a calendar date alone.
- The middle stretch of rehab is the hardest and least glamorous part, and it is where a comeback is quietly built.
- Oregon is a direct access state. You can choose your own physical therapist for ACL rehab without a surgeon's referral, the choice of where to rehab is yours.
- When choosing a provider, look for objective testing (force plates, VALD) and a facility with the space and equipment to rebuild jumping, sprinting, strength, and agility, not just relieve pain.
- Her progress is her own. We are honored to be part of her story and to support the work she is putting in.
Champions Circle is where we celebrate the people we get to work with. This one is a little different from a race result or a podium finish. It is a comeback still in progress, and it is one of the most inspiring kinds of work we see.
One of our local high school basketball athletes is five months into rehab after an ACL injury, and she has been putting in the kind of consistent, focused work that a strong return to sport is built on. She has more road ahead, and we wanted to recognize where she is right now, because the middle of the journey rarely gets the credit it deserves. If you are a parent whose athlete just tore an ACL and you are trying to figure out where to turn, we hope her story, and what follows, helps.
Five Months In: Watch Her Work
We put together a short spotlight on where she is at this stage of her recovery. The strength, the control, and the confidence returning to her movement are the product of months of showing up.
Spotlight: Five Months of ACL Rehab
A look at the work behind an ACL comeback in progress.
Her treating physical therapist, Dr. Jordan Prunty, DPT, broke down what this stage of the process actually involves.
"Five months post-ACL reconstruction. This is what the process looks like. KC is progressing into sport-specific movement: reactive landing drills, dual-task training, and controlled change-of-direction work. Each piece is intentional. Each piece is earned."
Dr. Jordan Prunty, DPT | APEX PWR
That word, earned, is the whole story. There is no shortcut through this stage. Every drill she is doing at five months is something she built the strength and control to be ready for.
Why the Middle of Rehab Is the Hard Part
The first days after ACL surgery get attention. So does the finish line, that first game back. The long middle stretch, the one this athlete is in right now, gets almost none. It is months of range-of-motion work, strength building, and repetition, often without a dramatic milestone to mark the days.
That middle is exactly where a comeback is won or lost. It is the stretch that tests whether an athlete will keep showing up when progress feels slow and the finish line is still far off. She has kept showing up. That is the whole point of this feature.
The dramatic moments in an ACL recovery are rare. The quiet, consistent work in the middle is what actually gets an athlete back. That is what she is doing right now.
What a Well-Run ACL Recovery Looks Like
Every athlete's plan is set by their surgeon and physical therapist for their specific case, but strong ACL rehabilitation shares a common shape. It is worth understanding for any family walking this road.
Restore Early, Rebuild Steadily
The early phase protects the repair while restoring range of motion and reawakening the quad. From there, the work becomes progressive strength building through the quad, hamstring, and hip, closing the gap between the surgical and non-surgical leg over months.
Retrain the Movement
Strength alone is not the finish line. The body has to relearn how to land, decelerate, and cut with control and confidence. This is where careful, progressive movement retraining rebuilds the patterns that keep the knee safe under sport demands.
Return on Criteria, Not Just the Calendar
Modern return-to-sport practice leans on objective criteria: strength benchmarks, movement quality, and testing that compares the surgical leg to the other side. Meeting those markers, rather than simply reaching a date on the calendar, supports a more confident return. Every timeline is individual and clinician-guided.
Why Return-to-Sport Is More Than Getting Strong
The biggest gap in ACL rehab, and the reason so many programs fall short, is treating strength as the finish line. Getting strong again is necessary, but it is not the same as being ready for the chaos of live sport. Dr. Prunty puts it directly.
"A knee that is strong in a straight line is not the same as a knee that is ready for a hard cut, a contested landing, or a sudden direction change at full speed."
Dr. Jordan Prunty, DPT | APEX PWR
This is why the later stages of a well-run recovery move into sport-specific work: reactive landing drills, dual-task training that forces decision-making under athletic demand, and controlled change-of-direction work. The goal is rebuilding not just the knee, but the confidence and the split-second decision-making the game requires. As Dr. Prunty and our sports physical therapy team put it, the aim is to rebuild the athlete, not only the strength.
We Are Honored to Be Part of Her Story
This progress belongs to her. The early mornings, the reps when nobody is watching, the patience through a long process, that is all her. We are grateful to play a role in the journey and to cheer her on toward a strong, confident return to the court.
Keep going. We are proud of you, and we are with you the rest of the way.
You Can Choose Where You Rehab Your ACL in Oregon
Here is something many families do not know, and it matters a great deal after an ACL injury. Oregon is a direct access state for physical therapy. That means you have the right to choose your own physical therapist and start care without waiting on a referral from your surgeon or physician. The choice of where to rehab is yours to make.
This is worth understanding because the default path often routes patients automatically to a clinic connected to their surgical group, sometimes without anyone mentioning that other options exist. You are allowed to ask questions and choose the provider you believe will give your athlete the best return to sport. When you are choosing, a few things are worth looking for.
Objective Testing Resources
Well-informed ACL rehab is built on objective data, not just feel. Force plate and VALD testing measure how each leg produces and absorbs force, quantify the gap between the surgical and non-surgical side, and give clear, measurable criteria for progressing and eventually returning to sport. Ask whether a clinic actually has these testing tools, because they are central to a modern, criteria-based return.
The Space and Equipment to Rebuild the Whole Athlete
An ACL return is not finished when the knee stops hurting. The athlete has to rebuild jumping, sprinting, cutting, strength, and agility to full sport demands. That takes real square footage and real equipment, room to sprint, to jump and land, to load heavy, and to train agility under control. A rehab that ends at the last pain-free step, without rebuilding those qualities, leaves an athlete short of a confident return.
This is where our model is built for the job. APEX PWR pairs objective testing with a full performance facility under one roof, so an athlete moves from early rehab all the way through rebuilding speed, power, and agility in the same place, with the same team, guided by the same data. Rather than two disconnected stops, rehab and performance run as one continuous path.
ACL Rehab and Return-to-Sport in Tigard, Beaverton & SW Portland, Oregon
If your athlete is facing ACL surgery or is somewhere in the long middle of recovery, our physical therapy team provides strength-based ACL rehabilitation and return-to-sport support. We are a first-choice ACL rehab resource for athletes across Tigard, Beaverton, Southwest Portland, Lake Oswego, and Tualatin, along with West Linn, Hillsboro, and the wider Portland metro. Because we are a performance and rehab facility under one roof, the transition from rehab back into full training is built into how we work. And because Oregon is a direct access state, you can start with us without a referral.
Support Through Every Stage of ACL Recovery
Strength-based rehab and a criteria-based path back to sport, all the way from post-surgery to a confident return to the game.
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