S
Sevens+ Physiotherapy
Physiotherapy · Movement · Rehab
Home/Conditions/Groin Pain
Lower Body · Treatment

Groin Pain

Adductor strain, FAI, hip impingement and chronic groin pain — common in cricketers, footballers and runners. The fix is almost always in the glutes and core, not the groin itself.

Typical programme
8–12 weeks
Session length
60 min
Recovery rate
88%
Understanding the condition

Groin pain almost always starts elsewhere.

Adductor strain, hip impingement (FAI) and chronic groin pain are some of the most misunderstood injuries we treat — common in cricketers, footballers and runners. Patients chase the painful spot for months. But the real problem is usually weak glutes and a core that cannot control the pelvis under load.

We assess the whole kinetic chain — hip, pelvis, trunk — to find what is actually overloading the groin. Then we build the strength and control that takes the strain off it, with a graded return-to-sport plan so you do not re-tear the moment you sprint or change direction.

Groin Pain
Image — hip and adductor strength testing
Why it happens

The root causes we look for.

01
Weak glutes
When the hip stabilisers underperform, the adductors overwork to control the leg.
02
Poor core control
A pelvis that tips and rotates under load funnels stress straight into the groin.
03
Hip impingement (FAI)
Bony shape at the hip can pinch and limit range, irritating the joint and groin.
04
Spike in load
Sudden increases in sprinting, kicking or change-of-direction outpace the tissue's capacity.
Symptoms we treat

Recognise any of these?

Sharp groin pain on kicking or cutting
Tightness deep in the hip
Pain on getting in/out of a car
Difficulty crossing legs
Pain on twisting movements
Weakness on single-leg balance
Our Approach

How we'll actually treat it.

WEEK 1
1
Differential diagnosis
Distinguish between adductor, hip joint, and pubic-symphysis driven pain.
WEEK 2–4
2
Calm the tissue
Manual therapy, gentle loading, and corrective movement drills.
WEEK 4–8
3
Build the chain
Glute strength, core control, hip mobility — the actual fix.
WEEK 8–12
4
Return to sport
Progressive loading, change-of-direction drills, return-to-play criteria.
The results

Treatment that actually holds.

Groin injuries have a reputation for lingering — but that is almost always because they were treated locally. Address the hip and core and recovery becomes predictable, with a clear return-to-sport milestone.

88%
Recovery & satisfaction rate
8–12 wk
Typical return-to-sport window
8–12 weeks
Typical programme
60 min
Per session
Common questions

Your questions, answered.

Still unsure? Our clinicians answer the questions patients ask most. You can always call the HSR Layout clinic for a straight answer first.

Ask us directly
Because rest alone does not fix the cause. Groin pain usually persists when the underlying weakness in the glutes and core is never addressed — the tissue heals, you load it the same way, and it strains again. Our programme breaks that cycle.
They can feel similar but behave differently under specific tests. We assess this carefully at your first visit. Many cases labelled as hernias respond fully to targeted strengthening, but we will refer for a surgical opinion if the picture warrants it.
Often we can keep you training in modified ways while we rebuild, but playing through sharp groin pain risks a longer layoff. We will give you a clear traffic-light system for what is safe.
FAI is a bony shape at the hip that can pinch with deep movements. Many people have it without symptoms, and most symptomatic cases improve with physiotherapy that changes how the hip is loaded. Surgery is considered only when conservative care has had a fair trial.
By making sure you return to sport stronger than the injury, not just pain-free. Our graded return-to-sport milestones test sprinting, kicking and cutting under load before you are cleared, which is how recurrence is prevented.
Because that is exactly when the demand on the adductors, hip and core peaks — lower-intensity movement rarely exposes the gap. It's a useful sign, not a bad one: it tells us your tissue tolerates moderate load fine, and we just need to build it up to match match-speed demands.
Occasionally, yes — nerve irritation in the lower back or pelvis can refer pain into the groin and mimic a muscular strain. We check this at assessment, because treating the groin directly would do nothing for a back-driven pain.
It can feel that way, mostly because the groin is loaded constantly through walking, sitting and turning, which gives it less downtime than, say, a calf strain. That's exactly why our programme focuses on building capacity rather than waiting it out — it shortens what can otherwise become a frustratingly long recovery.
Ready to start?

Let's get this handled.

Book a 60-minute assessment with one of our clinicians. You'll leave with a clear diagnosis, a written programme, and a realistic timeline.

Book assessment
What's included:
  • → Full movement assessment
  • → Diagnosis & root-cause analysis
  • → Written programme with milestones
  • → Cost & timeline upfront
  • → Same-day hands-on treatment if appropriate