1. What Golfer’s Elbow Actually Is
Medial epicondylitis =
overload of the flexor–pronator tendon origin
(on the inside of your elbow).
This tendon controls:
- finger flexion
- wrist flexion
- pronation (inward rotation of forearm)
- crimp strength
- grip stability
When the tendon origin is repeatedly overloaded, collagen fibers break down (micro-tears) faster than they rebuild.
Result:
chronic pain at the inside of the elbow.
2. How Golfer’s Elbow Happens (Mechanics)
The root cause:
high repetition tensile load on deep finger flexors + poor force direction.
Triggers:
1. Excessive crimping
Half-crimp & full-crimp recruit the deep flexors heavily, especially at fatigue.
2. Overgripping
High tension → high tendon origin stress.
3. Wrist collapse (ulnar deviation)
Changes tendon line → increases load at elbow.
4. Pulling with biceps instead of lats
Elbow flexors take too much rotational load.
5. High climbing volume
Especially on boards & small edges.
6. Poor scapular engagement
Shoulder instability → elbow compensates.
7. No deload weeks
Collagen remodeling (rebuilding process) never finishes.
This injury is not random — it is load accumulation.
3. Pain Pattern: What Golfer’s Elbow Feels Like
Pain appears at the inside of the elbow and follows a predictable pattern:
- dull ache during gripping
- pain when flexing wrist against resistance
- pain when squeezing a fist
- pain when pronating (turning palm down)
- pain worse during/after long sessions
- pain returning next morning
- forearm feels “tired” early in session
In later stages:
- pain in every crimp position
- pain in normal daily use
- weakness on pulling
- sharp pain on small edges
This is chronic tendon overload.
4. Yellow & Red Flags
Yellow Flags
- dull ache during session
- morning stiffness < 1 hour
- pain only in certain grips
- pain decreasing with warm-up
→ reduce intensity & volume by 30–50%.
Red Flags
- sharp pain
- pain worsening during warm-up
- loss of grip strength
- pain at rest
- numbness/tingling (nerve involvement)
→ stop climbing & start structured rehab.
5. Technique Errors That Cause Golfer’s Elbow
1. Elbows flaring
Adds rotational torque on the tendon origin.
2. Pulling with bent wrist
Poor wrist alignment → flexor tension ↑.
3. Hips too far from the wall
Finger force ↑ → flexor load ↑ → elbow load ↑.
4. Foot slips
Sudden catch → load spike → tendon overload.
5. Overgripping
Usually due to fear or poor footholds.
6. Too much board climbing
High intensity + high repetition = tendon death combo.
Elbow pain is often a technique problem, not a strength problem.
6. Immediate Actions (First 3–7 Days)
1. Reduce load, don’t fully rest
Rest alone weakens collagen.
2. Light isometrics (20–40%)
Static holds reduce pain + stimulate tendon healing.
3. Avoid pronation under load
Pronating = turning palm downward → extremely high flexor load.
4. No crimping
Open-hand or jugs only.
5. Gentle wrist mobility
If pain decreases with light movement → good sign.
If pain increases → reduce load further.
7. Rehab Plan — The Three-Phase Model
Phase 1 — Pain-Phase Isometrics (1–3 weeks)
Goal: reduce pain + stimulate safe collagen alignment.
- 4–5 × 30–45s holds
- 20–40% effort
- neutral wrist
- 1–2× daily
The tendon should feel better after isometrics.
Criteria to progress:
→ pain ≤3/10 during gripping
Phase 2 — Slow Eccentrics (3–8 weeks)
Goal: realign collagen + increase tendon stiffness.
Exercises:
- wrist flexion eccentrics
- pronation eccentrics (very light weight!)
- finger rolling eccentrics
Protocol:
- 8–12 reps
- 3–5s lowering
- 3× per week
- pain <3/10
Criteria to progress:
→ pain decreasing week to week
Phase 3 — Heavy–Slow Resistance + Progressive Loading
Goal: restore full load tolerance.
- wrist curls (controlled)
- pronation under low weight
- progressive half-crimp loading
- 2–5% weekly increase
- no back-to-back max days
Criteria to return to climbing:
- pain-free gripping
- no morning stiffness
- no weakness in wrist flexion
- symmetrical strength in both arms
8. Return-to-Climbing Protocol
Stage 1
Slab / vertical, big holds, open hand.
Stage 2
Large edges, half-crimp.
Stage 3
Light bouldering, no campus, no dynos.
Stage 4
Strength sessions reintroduced (low volume).
Stage 5
Medium edges, steeper terrain.
Stage 6
Small edges, full strength sessions.
Stage 7
Dynamic movement & full load.
If pain returns → drop back 1 stage.
9. Long-Term Prehab (4–6 min)
- 10 slow pronation reps
- 10 wrist flexion eccentrics
- 20–30s low-intensity isometric
- 10 extensor curls
- hip-engagement practice (reduces elbow load)
- wrist alignment drill
Daily micro-work beats monthly rehab.
10. When to Seek Professional Help
- pain persists >6–8 weeks
- pain at rest
- sharp, localized stabs
- nerve symptoms
- swelling
- grip strength drops suddenly
This can indicate advanced tendinopathy.