Lateral Epicondylalgia
Tennis elbow in cricketers — wrist extensor tendon degeneration from repetitive batting load and bottom-hand grip. Common in batters and less commonly in bowlers.
Lateral Epicondylalgia in Cricketers
Lateral epicondylalgia — commonly called tennis elbow — involves degeneration of the common extensor tendon at its attachment to the lateral epicondyle of the humerus. In cricketers, it is most commonly seen in batters, where the repetitive impact of ball on bat and the sustained grip through a long innings places high cumulative load on the wrist extensors.
The bottom-hand grip in batting is a particular driver — the bottom hand generates much of the power through the hitting zone, and the eccentric wrist extension load at ball contact repeatedly stresses the extensor carpi radialis brevis (ECRB) — the most commonly affected tendon.
Like all tendinopathies, chronic lateral epicondylalgia involves tissue degeneration rather than active inflammation — which is why rest alone often fails to resolve it, and why repeated corticosteroid injections without a loading program produce poor long-term outcomes.
Shockwave therapy for lateral epicondylalgia is available at our Five Dock clinic via our Sydney Shockwave service — a well-supported treatment for chronic, injection-resistant presentations.
Symptoms
Cricket-Specific Management of Lateral Epicondylalgia
Managing lateral epicondylalgia in a batter requires understanding the specific loads that driving, cutting, and pulling place on the extensor tendon — and building the tendon's capacity to handle them.
How We Manage Lateral Epicondylalgia
Assessment
Clinical assessment of the elbow including grip strength testing, wrist extensor load tolerance, and batting grip and technique review. We discuss training loads, match schedule, and what batting activities most provoke symptoms to build an accurate clinical picture.
Load Management & Grip Modification
Modification of batting load and grip during the acute phase. Minor grip adjustments — including bottom-hand position and grip pressure — to reduce extensor tendon load without requiring significant technique change. Equipment review where indicated.
Progressive Loading Program
Isometric wrist extension exercises initially — for pain management and early tissue loading — progressing to eccentric and isotonic wrist extensor strengthening over 8–12 weeks. Load is progressed based on symptom response and grip strength recovery.
Return to Full Batting
Graduated return to full batting — including net sessions with progressive shot intensity before return to match play. Grip strength benchmarks used to guide return alongside symptom monitoring.
FAQ — Lateral Epicondylalgia
Often yes — with load modification and a concurrent rehabilitation program. We'll advise on what batting to reduce or modify during the treatment period, and how to structure your net sessions around the rehabilitation. Complete batting cessation is rarely necessary.
This is a common presentation. Cortisone injection provides short-term relief without addressing the underlying tendon degeneration — and with repeated injections, outcomes tend to worsen. Shockwave therapy combined with a progressive loading program is a well-supported next step for injection-resistant lateral epicondylalgia.
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Related Conditions
Repetitive bowling and throwing shoulder loads.
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Pars stress fractures in fast bowlers.
SportsFit Cricket Physio — Five Dock
164 Great North Road, Five Dock NSW 2046 · (02) 8054 3775