massage therapy journal

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Knowing the Sport

The approach of a good sports massage therapist is a combination of knowledge of the sport itself and massage. To be good at what she does, Linden has studied more than classical massage. At one point, while working with an athlete, she realized some of the injuries were caused by too much training. She wanted to understand the implications of that, so she attended seminars from the International Sports Science Association.

“There’s a difference between training for a sport and training for the gym,” she says. “You need to know that difference. And you need to know the sport—if you’re working with weight lifters and you don’t know the difference between a snatch and a clean and jerk, then your knowledge reveals itself as somewhat limited.”

Knowing a sport may not mean studying a book—some women feel the wear and tear of their chosen sports in their own muscles. Athletes themselves, they’ve spent plenty of time on the massage table rather than beside it, and they add their own muscle memory, and history of pain, to their classroom training.

Deidre Vandenbos started out working on track and field athletes and now shares a practice geared toward athletes with four other fulltime therapists in Atlanta. She was a track and field athlete herself, a former shotputter and 100-meter runner. Ney competed for more than 20 years in amateur sports, playing on Atlanta’s first Ultimate Frisbee team.

Since 2003 Elke Brutsaert has served as the massage therapist for the Giant Bicycle Mountain Bike Team, a co-ed professional team. A former professional mountain bike athlete, she competed on the national and international racing circuits for eight years, and was USA Cycling World’s 2004 team manager for the downhill team.

She’d looked at massage school as a way to unwind from years of sports, but an opening came up on the professional mountain bike circuit, and her friends wanted to get her back in the game. She went from competing in the downhill race on the last day of the Mountain Bike World Championship in 2001 to her first day of massage school.

That background not only gives her knowledge—it gives her credibility. If an athlete comes to her with pain and explains how it happens, chances are she’ll know just how it feels.

“Unfortunately, I experienced it myself; I know what hurts,” Brutsaert says. “Athletes know me and respect me as a former athlete.”

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