How to Train Around Injury — What British Powerlifting Coaches Tell Their Athletes

How to Train Around Injury — What British Powerlifting Coaches Tell Their Athletes

Reading time: 14 minutes | Last updated: May 2026

Getting injured doesn’t mean stopping training. British Powerlifting coaches have a clear philosophy on this: train what isn’t injured, maintain the stimulus, and use the injury as an opportunity to address weaknesses. This UK guide covers the complete approach — movement substitutions for every major injury, programming adjustments, and when to self-refer to NHS physiotherapy.

Table of Contents

  1. The 4 Core Principles
  2. Training Around a Shoulder Injury
  3. Training Around a Knee Injury
  4. Training Around a Lower Back Injury
  5. Training Around an Elbow Injury
  6. How to Minimise Muscle Loss While Injured
  7. The Mindset That Separates Lifters Who Come Back Stronger
  8. The Return-to-Training Protocol
  9. When to Self-Refer to NHS Physiotherapy
  10. Green, Amber, Red
  11. Bottom Line
  12. FAQ

📌 The 4 Core Principles

1. Pain is information, not a stop sign

Pain above 4/10 during a movement = stop that movement. Pain below 3/10 that doesn’t worsen = often trainable with modification.

2. Train what isn’t injured

Research on cross-education shows training the uninjured limb reduces strength loss in the injured limb by up to 25% — even without direct training. British Powerlifting coaches apply this principle routinely.

3. Maintain the stimulus, change the movement

Substitute movements, don’t eliminate training categories.

4. Monitor the 24-hour response

Pain higher the day after = too much. Same or lower = load was appropriate.


💪 Training Around a Shoulder Injury

Avoid

  • Overhead pressing, behind-the-neck movements, upright rows

Can still do

  • ✅ All lower body movements
  • ✅ Neutral grip dumbbell press, floor press, landmine press
  • ✅ Neutral grip rows, chest-supported rows
  • ✅ Face pulls, band work, bicep and tricep isolation

Programming: Shift emphasis to lower body. A shoulder injury is an opportunity to bring up lagging leg strength.


🤜 Training Around a Knee Injury

Avoid

  • Deep squatting through pain, plyometrics, leg extensions at end range

Can still do

  • ✅ All upper body movements
  • ✅ Romanian deadlifts, hip thrusts, glute bridges
  • ✅ Leg press (partial range), seated leg curl
  • ✅ Isometric wall sits (patellar tendinitis rehab + quad maintenance)

🛠️ Training Around a Lower Back Injury

Avoid

  • Conventional deadlifts through pain, good mornings, loaded lumbar flexion

Can still do

  • ✅ All upper body movements
  • ✅ Trap bar deadlift (more upright torso, less lumbar stress)
  • ✅ Hip thrusts, leg press, seated cable rows
  • ✅ Core stability: dead bugs, bird dogs, pallof press

🤜 Training Around an Elbow Injury

Avoid

  • High-volume grip work without straps, supinated curls (for medial epicondylitis)

Can still do

  • ✅ All lower body movements
  • ✅ Neutral grip pressing and rows
  • ✅ Deadlifts with straps
  • ✅ Eccentric rehab work (fix and training stimulus simultaneously)

💪 How to Minimise Muscle Loss While Injured

  • 📌 Protein intake: 1.6–2.2g per kg bodyweight daily.
  • 📌 Train the uninjured limb — cross-education effect.
  • 📌 Isometrics on the injured structure.
  • 📌 Maintain training frequency — reduced volume beats complete rest.
  • 📌 Sleep 7–9 hours — primary driver of tissue repair.
  • 📌 Creatine 5g daily — reduces muscle loss during reduced training.

🧠 The Mindset That Separates Lifters Who Come Back Stronger

  • Reframe the injury as a training opportunity. A shoulder injury forces you to build your legs. A knee injury forces you to build your upper body.
  • Focus on what you can control: protein, sleep, rehab consistency, uninjured structure training.
  • Set short-term process goals: “Complete the eccentric protocol 3x this week.”
  • Document progress — film rehab exercises, track pain levels.

🔄 The Return-to-Training Protocol

  1. Pain-free at rest and during daily activities
  2. Pain-free through full range of motion unloaded
  3. Start at 50% of pre-injury load
  4. Increase load 10% per week maximum
  5. Full volume before full intensity
  6. Expect 4–8 weeks to return to pre-injury performance for most soft tissue injuries

🏥 When to Self-Refer to NHS Physiotherapy

Self-referral is available in most areas of England, Scotland, and Wales. See a physio if:

  • ❌ Pain 7+/10 or not improving after 4–6 weeks of consistent modified training
  • ❌ Any instability, swelling, or suspected structural damage
  • ❌ Radiation, tingling, or numbness

Search “NHS physiotherapy self-referral [your area]”. Private sports physio offers faster access.


🚦 Green, Amber, Red

Situation Train? How
Pain 0–3/10, no radiation, no instability ✅ Yes Modify movements. Monitor 24hr response.
Pain 4–6/10, consistent, no radiation ⚠️ Modified only Train uninjured structures. Avoid painful movements. Self-refer to NHS physio.
Pain 7+/10, radiation, instability, or acute onset ❌ Stop Rest injured structure. See a physio or GP immediately.

🏆 Bottom Line

British Powerlifting coaches don’t tell their athletes to rest completely when injured — they tell them to train smarter. Find the movements you can do, maintain the stimulus on uninjured structures, apply the rehab protocol, and monitor the 24-hour response. Self-refer to NHS physiotherapy when needed. Injured is not the same as stopped.

Injured is not the same as stopped. Keep training.

Knee Pain When Squatting — UK → Lower Back Pain — UK →

FAQ

Should I train with an injury?
Pain 0–3/10 — train with modifications. Pain 4+/10 — train uninjured structures only. Pain 7+/10 or instability — stop and see a physio or GP.

Can I self-refer to NHS physio for a lifting injury?
Yes — available in most areas. Search “NHS physiotherapy self-referral [your area].”

How do I maintain strength while injured?
Train uninjured structures fully, isometrics on injured structure, 1.6–2.2g protein/kg, 7–9 hours sleep, creatine 5g daily.

What exercises can I do with a shoulder injury?
All lower body, neutral grip pressing, neutral grip rows, face pulls, arm isolation. Full list above.

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Written by T-K — Creative Director & Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift.

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