High-Hamstring Tendinopathy: Running Mistakes That Cause It

High-hamstring tendinopathy, also known as proximal hamstring tendinopathy (PHT), is a degenerative condition of the hamstring's attachment at the ischial tuberosity. It is one of the most under-diagnosed and over-mistreated injuries in distance running. The research consensus, drawn from clinical reviews in the British Journal of Sports Medicine and JOSPT, identifies several training and behavioural patterns associated with onset. This article reviews those patterns, the evidence behind them, and the prevention principles that reduce risk.

This is a clinical guide, not a motivational one. Where evidence is strong, I'll cite it. Where it is weaker, I'll say so.

Understanding the condition

Proximal hamstring tendinopathy presents as deep buttock pain near the sit-bone (ischial tuberosity), worse with sitting, hill running, sprinting, and stretching positions that compress the tendon.

The pathology

As with Achilles tendinopathy, the proximal hamstring tendon develops a degenerative pathology rather than classical inflammation. Cook and Purdam's continuum model (2009), updated through the 2020s, applies here. The tendon shows disorganised collagen and increased neovascularisation. This is why traditional rest-and-ice approaches yield poor outcomes — the tendon needs loaded rehabilitation, not unloading.

Why running culture misses it

The pain is often attributed to 'tight hamstrings' or 'lower-back issues' and treated with stretching. Both interventions can worsen the condition. The tendon under compression — exactly the position of a stretched hamstring — is the position most likely to provoke and prolong symptoms.

Training mistakes the research has identified

Several patterns recur in clinical case series and retrospective cohort studies.

Sudden increases in hill running

Hill running, particularly uphill at faster paces, loads the proximal hamstring tendon significantly. Goom et al. (2016) in JOSPT specifically identify hill running as a high-load activity for the tendon. Abrupt introduction of hills — especially after a base phase of flat running — is a recognised onset trigger in retrospective surveys.

Sudden increases in long-run distance

The proximal hamstring stretches and loads through extended hip flexion at heel strike. Long-run kilometres accumulate this load repeatedly. Cohort studies of distance runners suggest weekly long-run distance jumps of more than 25-30% are associated with increased soft-tissue injury risk, though specific PHT-incident data is limited.

Track work and sprinting without preparation

Sprinting demands explosive hamstring loading at extreme hip flexion angles — exactly the mechanism most associated with PHT onset. Distance runners who introduce 200m or 400m repeats without prior preparation are over-represented in clinical case series.

Behavioural mistakes that increase risk

Beyond training load, several behaviours show association with PHT in clinical literature.

Aggressive hamstring stretching

The tendon under stretch compresses against the ischial tuberosity. Repeated compressive load on a degenerative tendon worsens pathology, not improves it. Cook and Docking's clinical commentary (2015) explicitly cautions against stretching tendinopathic tissue. Most clinicians now recommend loaded eccentric work in mid-range positions, not end-range stretches.

Prolonged sitting on hard surfaces

Sitting compresses the proximal hamstring tendon against the ischial tuberosity. For runners with early or recovering PHT, prolonged sitting (over 60 minutes) without breaks is a recognised aggravator. Office workers and long-commute runners are over-represented in case series.

Inadequate strength preparation

The hamstring complex is under-trained in most distance runners. Hamstring-to-quadriceps strength ratios below 0.6 are associated with elevated soft-tissue injury risk in several biomechanical studies. Runners who run high mileage without strength work are at higher risk than those who include hamstring-specific loading.

The evidence-based prevention approach

The strongest support is for progressive hamstring loading, not stretching or unloading.

Heavy slow resistance for hamstrings

Goom et al. (2016) and subsequent clinical guidelines recommend progressive loading as the first-line management for PHT. Romanian deadlifts, single-leg Romanian deadlifts, and Nordic hamstring curls feature prominently. Recommended dosage: 3 sets of 6-12 reps, 3 times per week, loaded heavy enough that the final reps are difficult.

Isometric loading early

For acute pain or early symptoms, isometric loading (e.g., bridges held for 30-45 seconds) reduces tendon pain in several controlled trials including Rio et al. on patellar tendon. Similar principles apply to PHT.

Avoid compressive end-range positions

During symptom flares, avoid deep hamstring stretches, deep squats, and prolonged sitting without breaks. The tendon needs load, not compression.

A practical prevention framework

Translating the evidence into runnable practice.

Strength routine

Three sessions per week, 30-45 minutes. Include: Romanian deadlifts (3 sets of 8-10), single-leg Romanian deadlifts (3 sets of 6-8 per leg), Nordic hamstring curls (3 sets of 5-8, with assistance as needed), glute bridges (3 sets of 12-15). Browse STRIDD exercise library for full routines.

Running-load principles

Increase weekly volume by no more than 10% from the four-week rolling average. Introduce hills and speed work progressively over 4-6 weeks. Take a deload week every 4 weeks. The acute:chronic workload ratio guidance from Gabbett's work applies here as for other soft-tissue injuries.

Behavioural changes

Stand up every 45-60 minutes during work. Use a cushioned chair or wedge cushion if you sit on hard surfaces. Replace deep hamstring stretches with loaded eccentric work. Track morning stiffness in the sit-bone area as an early warning.

When to see a clinician

Pain in the sit-bone area that persists past 7-10 days, worsens with sitting, or limits running pace warrants clinical assessment.

What to expect from assessment

A sports physiotherapist will conduct functional testing — single-leg bridges, bent-knee bridges, hamstring strength tests. Imaging is not routinely needed for diagnosis. Clinical history and physical examination are usually sufficient.

What to expect from treatment

Progressive loading is the first-line intervention. Cortisone injections and PRP have weak evidence in current systematic reviews. The standard of care is structured rehabilitation over 12-24 weeks. Read the STRIDD injuries hub and the recovery guide for return-to-run frameworks.

Prognosis

With adherent rehabilitation, most runners return to full training within 4-6 months. Complete resolution can take longer. Patience is the unglamorous standard of care.

For structured prevention routines, browse the STRIDD exercise library. For balanced training-load plans, use the plan generator. For more clinical guides, visit Running Lab.

Frequently asked questions

How is high-hamstring tendinopathy different from a hamstring strain?

A strain is an acute muscle-tissue injury with sudden onset, typically during sprinting or stretching, and shows tearing on imaging. High-hamstring tendinopathy is a chronic degenerative condition of the tendon attachment at the sit-bone with gradual onset, worse with sitting and hill running. The two have different management approaches — strains need progressive return; tendinopathy needs progressive loading.

Should I stop running entirely if I suspect PHT?

Not necessarily. Current clinical guidelines, including Goom et al. (2016), support relative rest combined with progressive loading rather than complete cessation. Reduce volume by 30-50%, avoid hills and speed work, and start a structured strength programme. Pain should remain below 3-4 out of 10 during running. If pain exceeds that level, reduce further. A clinician's input shortens the process.

Why does stretching make it worse?

The proximal hamstring tendon is compressed against the ischial tuberosity during deep hamstring stretching. Repeated compression on degenerative tendon tissue worsens pathology. Cook and Docking (2015) and subsequent clinical commentaries explicitly caution against compressive end-range stretching. Replace stretching with loaded eccentric work in mid-range — this stimulates collagen adaptation without compression.

How long does rehabilitation typically take?

Clinical case series and cohort studies suggest 12-24 weeks of progressive loading for meaningful recovery. Some runners return faster; others take longer. Imaging changes lag clinical improvement by months. The standard of care is patience, consistent loading, and load monitoring. Trying to compress the timeline by skipping rehab phases produces relapses, not faster returns.

Are Nordic hamstring curls essential, or can I skip them?

Nordic curls have the strongest evidence among hamstring exercises for both prevention and rehabilitation. Petersen et al. (2011) and several subsequent trials demonstrate reduced injury rates with Nordic programmes. They are uncomfortable to start, but assist with a band or partner until you build capacity. Skipping them is a choice to under-prepare; do them with assistance rather than not at all.

Is it safe to sit on a cushion or wedge during recovery?

Yes, and recommended during symptomatic phases. A cushion or wedge cushion reduces direct compression on the ischial tuberosity. Stand up every 30-45 minutes regardless. For office workers and long-commute runners, this single behavioural change reduces aggravation significantly. It does not replace loaded rehabilitation, but it removes a compressive load that delays recovery.