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Coach-Led 10-Minute Hip Mobility Routine for Better Pickleball Movement

Coach-led 10-minute hip mobility routine helps amateurs improve lateral movement and lower injury risk.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Coach-Led 10-Minute Hip Mobility Routine for Better Pickleball Movement
Source: majorleaguepickleball.co

A compact, coach-led mobility sequence aimed at opening the hips and sharpening court movement landed this week for amateur players who want a simple daily habit to stay quick and healthy. The roughly 10-minute routine centers on downward-dog flows, 90/90 switches, half-kneeling abductions, and frog stretches to target the range of motion most critical for dinking, split-step timing, and lateral recovery.

Coach Hayden Patriquin introduced the routine on January 20, 2026, presenting it as a practical warm-up, cool-down, or off-day practice for players who spend weekends at crowded community courts. The plan is short enough to fit before a session without killing energy, yet focused on hip opening and control that translate directly into better side-to-side slides, faster recoveries to the ready position, and reduced strain during low volleys at the kitchen line.

Start standing and move into a few slow downward-dog flows to build posterior chain tension and shoulder-to-hip connection. Pedal the feet and hold each down dog long enough to feel a release through the hamstrings, using the motion to reset posture before stepping into the floor work. From there transition to 90/90 switches on a mat or soft surface: sit with one hip flexed at 90 degrees and the other leg rotated behind at 90 degrees, then switch sides. Move deliberately through a set of repeats, focusing on smooth rotation and breathing to pry open external rotation used when lunging for a wide dink.

Half-kneeling abductions follow to address single-leg stability and lateral drive. From a half-kneel position, push the front knee out and lift the hip to activate glute medius and the stabilizers that power side-to-side pushes. Keep the torso tall and perform controlled reps on each side to simulate the explosive first step after a partner’s return. Finish on the belly with frog stretches to load internal rotation and deepen the hip opening needed for low recovery steps and reaching shots. Hold the frog for multiple 20- to 30-second cycles, progressing as comfort allows.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

This sequence is built for accessibility: no special equipment, minimal space, and a tempo that suits players of varying fitness. Use it as a dynamic warm-up before drills to improve court feel, as a gentle cool-down after a competitive set to aid recovery, or on off days to maintain mobility during busy seasons. For players nursing tight hips or guarding against nagging groin and lower-back issues, consistent practice may ease discomfort and support longer playability.

What this means for readers is straightforward: spend ten minutes to protect your knees, hips, and split-step, and you’ll likely notice quicker side-to-side reactions and fewer late-season aches. Keep the routine simple, do it often, and let the open hips lead to cleaner footwork and more confident court coverage.

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