6 Ankle Mobility Exercises To Keep You Agile And In The Game

May 2024 · 5 minute read

You’re not agile like you once were. It’s not so much an admittance of aging as an acknowledgment of the fact that we all physically peak ridiculously early — in our twenties, if not before — and that creaks, aches, pains, and inflexibility will knock on the door early and often. But if you know it’s coming, you can prepare for it. So let’s face the facts and start from the bottom, with ankle mobility. This crucial movement is going to decline if you don’t do something about it. So, let’s hop to.

As weirdly specific as it sounds, loss of ankle mobility is a legitimate thing that has a ton of ramifications. And if you played a lot of sports when you were younger, it’s only going to be compounded. “Ankle sprains are the most common sports injury,” says Constantine Demetracopoulos, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon specializing in foot and ankle surgery at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. “As time passes from those injuries, you start to develop ankle stiffness, whether from scarring in ligaments that make the ankle feel tighter or early arthritic changes in your ankle.”

In a nutshell, the loss of movement you’re experiencing is not the ankle itself, which is made from cartilage and bone, but the ligaments and lining of the ankle joint which scar, stiffen, and begin to restrict movement.

An Ankle Mobility Action Plan

So what to do about it? It’s probably too late for this piece of advice, but it’s worth noting, says Demetracopoulos, that “the best thing you can do for your ankles is not lose flexibility in the first place.” Like most things in life, he says, maintaining your ankle mobility through regular exercise is a lot easier than regaining it after its gone.

But let’s assume that horse has left the barn. In that case, what’s your best strategy? “It’s both stretching and also maintaining functional strength,” says Demetracopoulos. “Doing squats and lunges is way better for you than getting on an elliptical for 30 minutes and tuning out.” Those functional movements, he explains, will improve your range of motion much better than passive aerobic exercise. You don’t need to do these ankle mobility exercises with heavy weights — or even any weights at all. “Using your bodyweight is perfectly fine,” he says.

As for stretching, the best time to do it is after you work out, not before, for max results. “There’s a lot of evidence that stretching before exercise may actually weaken the body, makes you more susceptible to injury,” says Demetracopoulos. “So wait until you’re done.” Also, because tight ankles are directly related to tight Achilles tendons and calves, you’ll want to stretch the whole chain, from your foot up through your hip.

But first, you’ll want to do some strengthening.

Ankle Mobility Exercises

Because ankle mobility has as much to do with strength as it does flexibility, there are a few key exercises you’ll want to do to help develop muscles around the joint. “Your two best moves are squats and reverse lunges,” says Demetracopoulos, who notes you can perform these ankle mobility exercises either using light dumbbells or your own body weight.

RossHelen/Getty
FreshSplash/Getty

Ankle Mobility Stretches

For optimal results and maximum safety, before you exercise do a light warm up (think brisk walking), then do your workout. One you’ve finished, it’s time for gentle stretching and mobility moves that focus specifically on your ankles.

franckreporter/Getty
suedhang/Getty

more like this

This article was originally published on July 7, 2021

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7p63ToZyrpKljsLC5jqGcmqSknXyiusqlnGaln5e2rbXTsmSesJWnsKq%2FxKxkrKyimsGktMSs