All sports place demands, excitement and tension on the human body. Whether it is a school cricketer diving to stop a boundary, a college footballer changing direction at speed, or a professional athlete competing at the highest level, injuries are an unfortunate but almost inevitable reality of playing sports. Yet what often determines the outcome of a sports injury is not just the treatment that follows, but the decisions made immediately after the injury, in the first few minutes and hours.

Early diagnosis and assessment
The most common mistake players make during an injury is ignoring pain and continuing to play, driven by adrenaline. This can worsen what was originally a minor injury. Symptoms like pain, swelling, instability, and an inability to move normally should never be ignored – the body is signalling that something requires attention, and it is very important to listen to your body.
Early diagnosis is the first step and key differentiator in deciding between a straightforward recovery and a prolonged absence from sport. Initial steps post-injury would be to immediately evaluate the situation to look for signs such as severe swelling, deformity, inability to walk or discomfort in movement.
When the injuries are in the soft tissues, including the muscles, ligaments, and tendons, the emphasis would be on restricting swelling as well as protecting the injured part. Measures that could help include:
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Using ice at intervals for the first 24-48 hours to prevent pain and inflammation
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Compressing and elevating the injured limb to restrict swelling
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No excessive stretching so as not to exacerbate tissue injury

The delays
In my practice, I frequently see athletes who have delayed seeking expert assessment because they assumed they had suffered a simple sprain. Upon evaluation, patients will find out that any twisting of their knees associated with swelling or instability is an injury involving the ligaments, such as an ACL tear or an injury to the meniscus. In addition, injuries sustained while playing contact sports may involve shoulder instability or injuries of other soft tissues of the shoulder.
Players are often eager to return for an important match or a selection trial. But resuming play before a proper diagnosis is one of the major causes of a manageable injury turning into a more complex issue. The focus should always be on protecting long-term performance rather than salvaging a single game.
With all of the information available on the internet, the desire to become your own physician is one of the biggest problems doctors are facing at present. People must realise that over-the-counter medicines just provide relief from the pain; they do not heal the knee that is injured or mend the torn muscle. Athletes need to understand that pain medication serves just as a band-aid and not as medicine.
Any athlete who experiences a blow to the head followed by headache, dizziness, confusion, visual disturbances, memory loss or loss of consciousness, should be stopped immediately from playing, offboarded from the match, and the injury should be given special attention. Returning before appropriate medical clearance can expose the athlete to significant risks.

The role of rehabilitation
Over the years, sports medicine has evolved considerably, advancing arthroscopic techniques that have improved doctors’ ability to treat injuries while preserving function and facilitating return to sport much faster. However, surgical expertise alone is not enough – successful outcomes depend on accurate diagnosis, appropriate treatment selection, the right infrastructure and a carefully structured rehabilitation programme.
Rehabilitation is not separate from treatment – it is treatment. While for athletes, the top priority is to resume the game, from the physician’s point of view, our mission is to restore strength, mobility, neuromuscular control and confidence. The aim is to cure the problem but, more importantly, to get the patient ready for the physical challenge of competition.
. While working with competitive athletes, our goal is not only for them to get back to daily routine activities, but also to gain stability and readiness to safely participate in competitions. In my opinion, this is not a timeline that should serve as a criterion for return to sport activity, but a set of objective criteria.

Putting the body first
The culture of sports is associated with triumph and perseverance. But it is essential that athletes also realise that a smart recovery means better performance. Getting timely examinations, respecting the body and undergoing a rehabilitation programme can avoid the risk of future health problems.
The best athletes always understand that recovery does not mean weakness. On the contrary, it is an investment in longevity. The goal should always be the same: restoring movement, elevating performance and enabling a safe return to sport – not simply a return to activity.
(Dr. Kshitij Mody is an orthopaedic surgeon at Welcare Hospital, Vadodara, specialising in arthroscopy & sports medicine. drkshitijmody@welcarehospital.co.in)
Published – June 24, 2026 07:06 pm IST
