When most athletes think about performance, they focus on strength, mobility, endurance, and recovery. But there’s a critical part of the body that often gets overlooked—the pelvic floor. And for athletes dealing with nagging injuries, unexpected symptoms, or plateaus in performance, this system may be the missing link.
The pelvic floor is a group of muscles at the base of the pelvis. It works in coordination with the diaphragm, deep abdominals, and spinal stabilizers to control intra-abdominal pressure, maintain posture, and support movement. In other words, it’s central to core strength and full-body function.
READ: Personal Training and Physical Therapy Work Together at GOAT in Gales Ferry
Why it matters in sport:
- It stabilizes the spine and pelvis during heavy lifts, sprints, and multidirectional movement
- It supports breathing and bracing under load
- It contributes to hip and lower back mechanics
- It absorbs and distributes force during impact activities
When the pelvic floor is weak, overactive, or out of sync, it can lead to issues that affect both recovery and performance. At GOAT in Gales Ferry, we help athletes identify and resolve these imbalances with pelvic floor physical therapy—so they can move, lift, and train with confidence.
Common Signs of Pelvic Floor Dysfunction in Active People
Pelvic floor dysfunction doesn’t always show up as pelvic pain or urinary issues—it often hides behind more general symptoms that athletes brush off or work around. That’s why many active people go months (or years) without realizing their pelvic floor might be the issue.
If you’re dealing with unexplained symptoms that seem to resist standard treatment, it might be time to look deeper.
Signs to watch for include:
- Leaking during workouts — especially during jumping, lifting, or running
Core instability — feeling “disconnected” during lifts or struggling to brace under load - Chronic low back, hip, or groin pain — especially when no clear cause is found
- Pelvic heaviness or pressure — worsened by exertion or long periods of standing
- Postpartum symptoms — like discomfort, weakness, or slow return to activity
These symptoms aren’t “just part of training” or something to ignore. They're your body asking for support—and pelvic floor PT is designed to answer that call.
At GOAT, we help athletes decode these signs, get to the root cause, and build a plan that restores strength and control—without pausing the progress.
READ: How Pelvic Floor PT Can Help with Postpartum Recovery
How Pelvic Floor PT Supports Injury Recovery
When athletes think about rehab, they usually focus on the joints and muscles they can see and feel—knees, hips, backs, shoulders. But what if the source of persistent pain or incomplete recovery lies deeper, in the pelvic floor?
Pelvic floor physical therapy can be a game-changer for recovery—especially for athletes who’ve plateaued in healing or are dealing with issues that keep returning.
Here’s how pelvic floor PT aids recovery:
- Re-educates deep core coordination after surgery, injury, or periods of deconditioning
- Supports postpartum return to sport, rebuilding stability and strength from the inside out
- Addresses chronic low back or hip pain often tied to pelvic floor imbalance
- Improves scar tissue mobility following abdominal or pelvic procedures
- Resolves pelvic asymmetries that disrupt movement mechanics and delay progress
At GOAT, we combine pelvic floor techniques with full-body movement assessment to make sure athletes recover fully—not just symptom-free, but stronger and more resilient than before. Whether you’re post-op, postpartum, or simply stuck, pelvic floor therapy helps bridge the gap between rehab and performance.
Performance Benefits of a Strong, Coordinated Pelvic Floor
The pelvic floor doesn’t just play a role in recovery—it’s a key player in high-level athletic performance. When it’s strong, flexible, and working in sync with your core and breath, it helps you move more efficiently, lift more safely, and recover more effectively.
At Goat, we view the pelvic floor as part of your performance engine. It’s involved in everything from generating power to stabilizing during quick changes of direction.
Performance benefits include:
- Better breathing and bracing mechanics under load or during endurance work
- Increased core stability for heavier lifts and more dynamic movement
- Improved coordination and control through the hips and spine
- Reduced fatigue and energy leaks, especially during high-volume training
- Enhanced recovery thanks to improved circulation and intra-abdominal pressure regulation
Whether you're an Olympic lifter, CrossFitter, runner, or recreational athlete, your pelvic floor plays a critical (often invisible) role in performance. Training this system can give you an edge where it matters most—at the core of everything you do.
READ: Introducing Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy at GOAT PT: What You Need to Know
Pelvic Floor Therapy at Goat: Integrated, Athlete-Centered Care
At GOAT in Gales Ferry, CT, we don’t treat pelvic floor therapy as a niche service—we see it as a powerful tool for building stronger, smarter, more resilient athletes. Whether you're returning from injury, rebuilding after pregnancy, or pushing for performance gains, our team integrates pelvic floor PT into your larger movement and training goals.
Here’s what makes our approach different:
- Full-body assessments that connect pelvic floor health with how you lift, move, and train
- Hands-on therapy and neuromuscular re-training to restore balance, coordination, and strength
- Collaboration with trainers and coaches to align rehab with your sport and performance needs
- Education and empowerment so you understand your body, inside and out
You don’t have to accept leaking, pain, or core instability as part of being active. With the right care, your pelvic floor can become a source of power—not limitation.
Ready to Train with a Stronger Foundation?
Whether you're coming off an injury or looking to enhance your performance, pelvic floor physical therapy can help. Contact GOAT today to schedule your athlete-focused pelvic floor assessment and take control of your training from the inside out.