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Why Runners Need to Pay More Attention to Their Hips

Why Runners Need to Pay More Attention to Their Hips

June 24, 20263 min read

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Why Runners Need to Pay More Attention to Their Hips

Runner pain in Achilles

A lot of runners and active adults come into the clinic convinced their pain is coming directly from the area that hurts.

Front of the knee? Must be the quads.
IT band pain? Probably need to foam roll more.
Achilles pain? Calves must be tight.

But one of the biggest mistakes we see is treating symptoms without looking at the system driving them.

The body works as a chain. If one area is not doing its job well, another area usually has to pick up the slack. And more often than not, the hips are the missing piece.

The Hips Are the Engine

Your hips are responsible for producing force, controlling rotation, stabilizing your pelvis, and helping transfer energy efficiently while running and moving.

If the hips are weak, poorly coordinated, stiff, or simply not contributing enough, your body has to find another way to keep moving.

That compensation often shows up as:

  • Knee pain

  • IT band irritation

  • Quad tightness

  • Shin splints

  • Achilles overload

  • Hamstring strains

  • Low back discomfort

The frustrating part is that many people spend months chasing the painful area without ever addressing the actual driver.

How This Effects Runners

Running is essentially thousands of single-leg jumps strung together.

Every step requires:

  • Stability

  • Force production

  • Rotation control

  • Shock absorption

Your hips sit at the center of all of it.

When hip control breaks down, runners often start to:

  • Overstride

  • Collapse inward at the knee

  • Lose stiffness and efficiency

  • Overwork the quads and calves

  • Burn more energy at the same pace

This is one reason why strengthening alone does not always fix injuries. You can have strong muscles in isolation but still move poorly under load or fatigue.

The Real Goal Is Better Movement

At Return 2 Sport PT, we are rarely just asking:
“Is this muscle weak?”

We are asking:

  • Is it firing at the right time?

  • Is it controlling motion correctly?

  • Does it maintain stability when fatigued?

  • Does it transfer force efficiently during running?

That changes how we evaluate injuries.

Instead of only treating pain, we look at:

  • Running mechanics

  • Hip control

  • Single-leg stability

  • Strength asymmetries

  • Mobility restrictions

  • Force production patterns

Because the goal is not just getting you out of pain.

The goal is making you more durable, more efficient, and ultimately a better runner.

What Most People Actually Need

Most runners do not need random band exercises forever.

They need:

  • Better single-leg strength

  • Improved hip stability

  • Better rotational control

  • Proper loading progressions

  • Running-specific strength training

  • Better recovery and tissue capacity

And importantly, they need exercises that actually transfer back into running performance.

Pain Is Often the Warning Sign, Not the Root Cause

Your quads may feel tight.
Your knee may hurt.
Your calves may constantly feel overloaded.

But that does not always mean those tissues are the primary problem.

Sometimes they are just working overtime because another system is underperforming.

That is why good rehab should never just chase symptoms. It should improve how the entire system moves and performs.

Because when the hips do their job well, everything downstream usually works better too.

Happy running,

R2S Team

Dr. Dylan Glass, PT, DPT, SMTC

Dr. Josh Cornett PT, DPT, COMT, CDNT

Return 2 Sport PT

www.Return2SportPT.com

256-513-9525

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Dylan Glass, PT, DPT, SMTC

Return 2 Sport PT Doctor of Physical Therapy

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At Return 2 Sport PT & Performance, we specialize in performance-based physical therapy.

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