1. What the Rotator Cuff Actually Does
The rotator cuff is a group of four small stabilizer muscles that:
- center the humeral head (ball of shoulder) in the socket
- control rotation
- stabilize during overhead pulling
- regulate force transfer from arms → torso
- protect shoulder during swings and dynamic moves
If the cuff is weak or fatigued:
- the humeral head drifts (usually upward or forward)
- the shoulder feels unstable
- larger muscles overcompensate (deltoid, pec, biceps)
- clicking and catching begin
- pain often appears weeks later
Instability almost always precedes injury.
2. How Rotator Cuff Instability Happens in Climbers
Climbing loads the shoulder in unstable, rotated, and stretched positions, especially overhead and sideways.
Instability develops when:
1. Scapula is not engaged
Shoulder blade = foundation.
If it’s unstable → cuff must fight alone.
2. Too much pulling volume
High repetition = small stabilizers fatigue first.
3. Overreaching in dynamic movement
Arm extended at end-range = low mechanical stability.
4. Catching swings without preparation
Shoulder absorbs rotational shock → cuff overloaded.
5. Weak external rotators
External rotation keeps humeral head centered.
6. Excess internal rotation (elbows flaring)
This rolls the shoulder inward → cuff loses leverage.
7. Poor thoracic posture (rounded upper back)
Reduces shoulder space → alters force direction.
Instability is NOT a “mystery.”
Het is biomechanisch extreem voorspelbaar.
3. Pain & Instability Pattern: What It Feels Like
Rotator cuff instability has a unique signature:
Early stage (no real pain yet):
- clicking or popping
- feeling of “slipping” during moves
- shoulder feels weak at certain angles
- poor overhead control
- difficulty locking off cleanly
- fatigue arrives early
Mid stage (mechanical irritation):
- dull ache in front or side of shoulder
- pain when reaching overhead
- soreness after climbing
- pain during inward or outward rotation
Late stage (near-impingement or tendinopathy):
- sharp catching pain
- instability during dynos
- weakness lifting arm
- pain radiating down biceps
If you feel instability + clicking + loss of control → this guide .
4. Yellow & Red Flags
Yellow Flags — reduce load
- mild instability
- clicking without pain
- weakness in overhead positions
- pain that improves with warm-up
Red Flags — stop climbing**
- sharp catching pain
- shoulder “gives out” during move
- loss of overhead strength
- sudden clicking + pain together
- persistent weakness
Rotator cuff injuries escalate quickly if ignored.
5. Technique Errors That Cause Instability
1. Pulling without scapular engagement
Shoulder blade not retracted/depressed → humeral head drifts.
2. Elbows flaring on sidepulls
Internal rotation → cuff loses leverage → unstable.
3. Catching dynos with straight arms
No space for cuff → force spike directly on joint.
4. Overreaching
Arm moves outside safe torque range → cuff overloaded.
5. Climbing with rounded upper back
Scapula can’t rotate correctly → shoulder collapses.
6. Gastons without trunk rotation
Shoulder isolates the force → instability ↑.
6. Immediate Actions (0–7 Days)
1. Reduce overhead and dynamic climbing
Keeps instability from escalating.
2. Scapula-only drills
No arm load — just learning control.
3. Light external rotation isometrics (20–40%)
Stimulates cuff without irritation.
4. Avoid internal rotation under load
Elbow should point forward, not outward.
5. No dynamic catches
High-risk for instability + impingement.
7. Rehab Plan — The Three-Phase Model
Instability must be fixed through skill → strength → load.
Phase 1 — Motor Control: Re-Learn Scapular Mechanics (1–2 weeks)
Exercises:
- Scapular depression holds
- Scapular retraction pulses
- Scapular upward rotation (overhead)
- Serratus wall slides
- “Packing drill” (setting the shoulder before pulling)
Volume:
-
5–10 minutes daily
Criteria to progress:
→ no pinching when lifting arm overhead
→ clicking reduced
Phase 2 — Rotator Cuff Strength (3–6 weeks)
Goal: build stable rotation control.
Exercises:
- External rotation eccentrics (slow lowering)
- Internal rotation eccentrics (light)
- YTWL patterns
- Prone shoulder raises
- Bottom-range overhead isometrics
Protocol:
- 3× per week
- 8–12 reps
- 3–5 second eccentrics
- low pain (<3/10)
Criteria to progress:
→ stable overhead pull with no catching
Phase 3 — Progressive Climbing Load (6–12 weeks)
Build through:
- controlled sidepulls
- controlled gastons
- slow deadpoint catches
- shoulder engagement drills
- 2–5% weekly progression
- steeper terrain last
Goal:
restore shoulder stability and load tolerance in climbing-specific positions.
Criteria to return fully:
- no instability
- no clicking
- no weakness
- no morning pain
8. Return-to-Climbing Protocol
Step 1
Vertical terrain, no dynamic moves.
Step 2
Open-hand climbing, focus on scapula-first technique.
Step 3
Controlled sidepulls with elbow pointing forward.
Step 4
Light gastons, no extreme ranges.
Step 5
Light dynamic moves with “scapula set before catch.”
Step 6
Medium terrain, small angles, moderate intensity.
Step 7
Full load, dynamic climbing, steep terrain.
If instability or clicking returns → go back 1 step.
9. Long-Term Prehab (5 minutes)
- 10 external rotation eccentrics
- 10 scapular depressions
- 10 serratus wall slides
- 10 YTWL reps
- 5 controlled sidepulls (technique drill)
This keeps the shoulder stable for life.
10. When to Seek Professional Help
- shoulder feels unstable even at rest
- sharp catching + weakness
- pain radiates down arm
- clicking + pain together
- loss of external rotation strength
- symptoms last >6–8 weeks