APEX PWR | Physical Therapy Feature · Vol. 78
Sports Physical Therapy for Youth Athletes in Portland: Why Posterior Chain Strength Is the Biggest Lever
If you're the parent of a young athlete, you've probably had one of these moments. Your kid is playing the sport they love. Things are going well. And then a tweaked hamstring, a knee that doesn't feel right after landing, a hip that's been nagging for weeks. Or worse: the non-contact landing that ends the season.
Most lower-body youth athlete injuries are not random. They follow a pattern. And the single most overlooked piece of preventing them is something your kid almost certainly is not doing in any structured way: posterior chain strength training, paired with the movement coaching to apply it under real game-day conditions.
Structured neuromuscular training — with posterior chain strength and plyometrics as the key components — reduces ACL injury risk in young athletes by approximately 50 percent. The kids actually doing this work are not the majority. This is the gap.
Key Takeaways: The 5-Second Version
- Most youth athlete lower-body injuries follow a pattern. Weak posterior chain, poor hip and pelvic control, faulty landing mechanics. Predictable. And preventable.
- Posterior chain = glutes, hamstrings, low back, calves. It's what extends the hip, stabilizes the pelvis, and absorbs landing forces.
- ACL tears in young female athletes happen 2 to 8 times more often than in males. Structured neuromuscular training cuts that risk roughly in half.
- Ages 9 to 14 is the optimal window to build this foundation. Earlier is better.
- Sports PT at APEX goes well beyond rehab. Our team uses physical therapy as a screening and prevention tool, working directly alongside our sports performance coaches under one roof.
- The action step: Book a youth athlete evaluation. We assess movement, identify risk markers, and get your kid on the right path — before something tears.
The Problem Most Parents Don't See Coming
Youth sports have changed. Specialization is earlier, training volumes are higher, and the competition starts younger. The result, well documented across the pediatric sports medicine literature: lower extremity injury rates in young athletes have climbed dramatically over the past two decades.
The reason this happens is biomechanical, and once you see it, you can't unsee it. The body is a kinetic chain. When the muscles on the back of the body (the posterior chain) are not strong enough to extend the hip and stabilize the pelvis, the front of the body compensates. The quadriceps overload, the knee tracks inward on landings, the hip flexors get tight, and the rib cage and pelvis stop moving as separate units. That last piece — poor rib-and-hip dissociation — is one of the most reliable predictors we see for athletes who later end up with hip impingement, low back pain, or ACL injury.
Female youth athletes face a 2 to 8 times higher non-contact ACL injury rate than male athletes. The drivers are anatomical, hormonal, and neuromuscular. The fix is structured posterior chain and neuromuscular training — started young.
What "Posterior Chain Training" Actually Means
The posterior chain is the network of muscles on the back of the body:
Extends the hip, controls knee position during landings and cuts. Gluteus medius and maximus are the primary stabilizers.
Decelerates the leg, stabilizes the knee, and protects the ACL during rapid extension and cutting.
Connects the pelvis to the rib cage, allowing forceful rotation without injury.
Generates push-off force and absorbs ground reaction forces on every step.
When these muscles are strong, coordinated, and trained to fire in the right sequence, the entire kinetic chain works the way it was designed to. Hips extend powerfully. Knee stays in line over the foot during landings. Pelvis stays stable when the trunk rotates.
The work isn't complicated: hip hinges, deadlifts (scaled to age and ability), single-leg work, glute bridges, hamstring eccentrics, sprint mechanics drills, and progressive landing and cutting practice. Done consistently — two to three times per week for at least 23 weeks — the changes are dramatic.
What the Research Actually Says
The evidence base on neuromuscular and posterior chain training for youth athlete injury prevention is one of the strongest in sports medicine:
The Faude meta-analysis is particularly clear on the protocol: two to three sessions per week, 10 to 15 minutes per session, for at least 6 weeks (longer is better). That is not a heavy ask. It is just rarely done in a structured way without somewhere like APEX guiding it.
How APEX Sports PT Works for Young Athletes
Sports physical therapy at APEX is built around four practical phases — whether your athlete is currently injured or you're trying to prevent the injury that hasn't happened yet. Families from Beaverton, Lake Oswego, Tualatin, Hillsboro, and Portland drive to our Tigard location for this work.
Our sports PT team starts every youth athlete with a movement screen. We measure single-leg balance, landing mechanics, hip and pelvic control, posterior chain strength, and any asymmetries between sides of the body. This is where the injury risk markers show up — well before the athlete feels anything is wrong.
The findings from the screen drive a customized plan: posterior chain strengthening, hip and pelvic stability work, single-leg progressions, landing mechanics coaching, and sport-specific movement preparation.
Because our PTs share a building with our sports performance team, the handoff from PT to performance training is seamless. The screening data from PT informs the performance program. The performance work reinforces the PT corrections.
If your athlete does get hurt, our PTs handle return-to-play with loaded, evidence-based progressions — not passive treatment. The standard for returning to sport is measurable, with criteria that go beyond a date on a calendar.
How This Connects to Sports Performance Training
This article pairs with our Athlete Angle on speed training for youth athletes. The same posterior chain that protects your kid's knee is the engine that makes them faster. Hip extension produces sprint speed. Glute strength produces vertical jump. Hamstring eccentric strength protects the ACL during deceleration and cutting. Performance and protection are not separate goals at APEX. They're the same work, programmed by people who understand both.
If your athlete already trains with us in sports performance training, the sports PT work integrates directly into that program. If they don't yet, this is the entry point. Both live under the same roof, with the same coaches and clinicians talking to each other every day.
Most kids get neither in any structured way. The few who get both — year-round, for years — are the ones who stay healthy and pull ahead.
Who This Is For
Sports physical therapy at APEX is designed for young athletes who fit any of these:
- Currently uninjured but wants to stay that way through a competitive season or career
- Recovering from a recent injury and looking for return-to-play that doesn't just check a calendar box
- Has had recurring issues — a knee that flares up, a hip that gets tight, a hamstring that's been pulled before
- Is a female athlete in a sport with ACL risk: soccer, basketball, lacrosse, volleyball, gymnastics
- Is approaching or going through adolescence and growing fast — the highest-risk biomechanical window
- Is being recruited or playing at a competitive level where missing a season has career consequences
Don't Wait for Something to Tear.
Book a youth athlete evaluation at APEX PWR in Tigard. Serving Portland, Beaverton, Lake Oswego, Tualatin, Hillsboro, and the broader metro.
Schedule Sports PT Sports Performance TrainingFrequently Asked Questions
What types of injuries does sports physical therapy at APEX prevent?
The biggest categories are ACL and other knee injuries, hip-related issues (impingement, labral pain, hip flexor injuries), hamstring strains, and low back pain. Poor rib and hip dissociation, weak posterior chains, and faulty landing or cutting mechanics are common drivers behind all of these. Position-specific injury patterns get sport-specific programming on top of the foundational work.
Does my child need physical therapy if they aren't injured?
Yes, in many cases. Pre-habilitative physical therapy at APEX PWR is a screening and risk-reduction service for young athletes who aren't currently hurt. The research is clear: structured neuromuscular and posterior chain training reduces ACL injury risk by roughly 50 percent in young athletes.
What is the posterior chain and why does it matter for my kid?
The posterior chain is the network of muscles on the back of the body: glutes, hamstrings, lower back, and calves. It's responsible for hip extension, pelvic stability, and absorbing landing forces. When the posterior chain is weak, young athletes compensate by overloading the front of the knee and other joints — which is the mechanism behind ACL tears and many overuse hip and knee injuries.
Why are ACL injuries so common in young female athletes?
Female athletes face a 2 to 8 times higher non-contact ACL injury rate than male athletes (Wild et al., 2012). The drivers are anatomical (wider pelvis, different Q angle), hormonal, and neuromuscular. Structured neuromuscular training, with posterior chain strengthening and plyometrics, reduces ACL injury risk by approximately 50 percent.
When should we start sports PT for our young athlete?
The preadolescent and early adolescent years (roughly ages 9 to 14) are considered an optimal window for foundational posterior chain and neuromuscular training. That said, sports PT for prevention is valuable at any age before an injury occurs.
Do you serve athletes outside of Tigard?
Yes. APEX PWR is located at 11105 SW Greenburg Rd in Tigard, Oregon, and serves athletes from Beaverton, Portland, Lake Oswego, Tualatin, Hillsboro, and the broader Portland metro area.
How is sports PT different from regular physical therapy?
Sports physical therapy is built around the demands of athletic performance — well beyond baseline daily function. The end goal isn't to walk without pain. It's to cut, sprint, land, and decelerate under competition conditions.
How long does it take to see results?
Movement and strength changes start within 4 to 6 weeks of consistent work. The full protective effect on injury risk shows up at 23 weeks and beyond — the research-supported minimum for strong neuromuscular adaptations in youth athletes.
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