Sever’s & Osgood-Schlatter in young footballers: what parents need to know
Heel pain and pain below the kneecap are extremely common in young athletes during growth spurts. Both conditions are self-limiting — but the “just rest until it’s gone” advice is outdated. Here’s the modern, evidence-based approach.
Why your 12-year-old’s heel hurts in the middle of football season
Almost every parent who walks into clinic with a young footballer has the same opening line: “He’s been complaining about his heel for weeks — sometimes the front of his knee — but he’s fine when he’s not playing. Is it serious?”
The answer is almost always: it’s not serious in the orthopaedic sense, but it’s very real, it deserves managing properly, and the “just push through it” advice is wrong.
The two conditions you’re probably looking at are Sever’s disease (calcaneal apophysitis) and Osgood-Schlatter disease (tibial tubercle apophysitis). Both are growth-plate-related conditions that cluster in young athletes during periods of rapid bone growth, and both are remarkably common in football.
What’s actually going on biologically
Bones in adolescents grow at the apophyses — growth plates where major tendons attach. During growth spurts, bone lengthens faster than the connected muscle-tendon unit, leaving the apophysis under chronic traction load. Add the high volume of running, kicking, and jumping that football demands, and the apophysis becomes inflamed and painful. It’s the orthopaedic equivalent of pulling repeatedly on a rope where it’s anchored to drying concrete.
Sever’s is the Achilles tendon’s pull on the calcaneal apophysis. Heel pain, worse with running and at the end of training, often improves with rest. Peak incidence: 8–14 years, with a 1.5:1 male predominance. Reported prevalence in active children up to ~10%, with seasonal patterns matching football and athletics calendars [1].
Osgood-Schlatter is the patellar tendon’s pull on the tibial tubercle. Pain at the top of the shin, just below the kneecap, often with a visible bump that gets bigger with time. Peak incidence: 10–15 years. Prevalence in adolescent athletes is reported at roughly 10–15%, with bilateral involvement in 20–30% of cases [2].
The good news: both are self-limiting
Both conditions resolve once the apophysis fuses to the rest of the bone — typically by mid-to-late adolescence. That doesn’t mean they’re harmless to ignore. Untreated, they can:
- Persist for 6–24 months instead of resolving in 2–3
- Cause significant time loss from the sports the child loves
- Lead to secondary issues from movement compensations
- Occasionally (in OSD) leave a residual painful bony fragment that requires surgery in adulthood
The historical advice — total rest until pain resolves, sometimes for months — has fallen out of favour because it’s neither necessary nor pleasant for the child, and it can lead to deconditioning that sets up other problems.
The current evidence-based approach: load management
The most useful contemporary framework comes from Rathleff and colleagues’ work on adolescent overuse, and is best summarised as: modify load to keep pain manageable and don’t lose the activity entirely [3].
In practical terms for a young footballer:
Pain-monitoring guide
Use a 0–10 scale during and after activity. Pain up to 4/10 during sport, settling within 24 hours, is acceptable. Pain >5/10, or pain that lingers for >24 hours, means the load was too high — reduce the next session.
Load reduction toolbox
Rather than full rest, modify the dose. Options include:
- Drop training sessions per week (3 → 2)
- Reduce session duration (90 min → 60 min)
- Skip the highest-impact components (sprinting, plyometrics, repeated kicking) while keeping technical work
- Alternate match days — play one weekend, rest the next, until symptoms settle
Strengthening and flexibility
For Sever’s: heel raise progressions, calf strengthening, and gentle calf stretching all help. Heel cups or in-shoe wedges reduce tendon tension and provide reliable symptomatic relief during the highest-load phases [4].
For Osgood-Schlatter: progressive quadriceps loading — especially heavy slow resistance at home — addresses the underlying capacity deficit. Avoiding deep squatting and direct pressure on the tubercle (kneeling) during flares is enough; full immobilisation is rarely indicated.
When to actually worry
The following warrant investigation rather than reassurance:
- Pain at rest, particularly at night
- Pain that doesn’t correlate with activity load
- Significant swelling, redness, or warmth
- Constitutional symptoms (fever, weight loss, fatigue)
- Pain that’s rapidly worsening despite appropriate management
These features can indicate stress fractures, infection, or rarely, more serious bony pathology. They’re uncommon, but they’re the things that justify imaging.
The North Brisbane junior football reality
Junior squads in our area train two or three nights a week, play a match every weekend, and many kids stack additional sport on top — school football, futsal, athletics. By mid-season, a 12-year-old who just hit a growth spurt can easily be playing seven or eight high-impact sessions a week.
The single best intervention I see make a difference for these kids isn’t a physio technique — it’s a conversation with the parent about weekly training load, what the pain pattern is telling us, and how to keep them playing the sport they love without making things worse.
If your child is grinding through pain to keep playing — or has been benched indefinitely with the “just rest” advice — there’s a much better middle path. That’s the conversation I have most often in clinic with the families of young athletes in Brendale and the wider North Brisbane area, and it’s usually shorter and simpler than parents expect. (See what an initial assessment covers.)
References
- James AM, Williams CM, Haines TP. Effectiveness of interventions in reducing pain and maintaining physical activity in children and adolescents with calcaneal apophysitis (Sever’s disease): a systematic review. J Foot Ankle Res. 2013;6(1):16.
- de Lucena GL, dos Santos Gomes C, Guerra RO. Prevalence and associated factors of Osgood-Schlatter syndrome in a population-based sample of Brazilian adolescents. Am J Sports Med. 2011;39(2):415-420.
- Rathleff MS, Winiarski L, Krommes K, et al. Activity modification and knee strengthening for Osgood-Schlatter disease: a prospective cohort study. Orthop J Sports Med. 2020;8(4):2325967120911106.
- Wiegerinck JI, Yntema C, Brouwer HJ, Struijs PA. Incidence of calcaneal apophysitis in the general population. Eur J Pediatr. 2014;173(5):677-679.
- Smith JM, Varacallo M. Osgood-Schlatter Disease. StatPearls. Updated August 2023.