The CrossFit Open kicks off this week, and for many athletes it’s one of the most exciting times of the year.
But for a lot of athletes, the Open also shines a spotlight on the nagging pains and lingering injuries that never quite went away.
That shoulder that feels fine most days.
The low back that tightens up with deadlifts.
The knee you’ve been “working around” for months.
During everyday training, you might be able to manage these issues. But when volume increases, intensity spikes, and workouts are stacked week after week, those small problems often become performance limiters.
How Nagging Injuries Reduce Performance
You don’t need a major injury to see your performance drop. Even low-level pain or stiffness can quietly affect how you move.
Here’s how it shows up during the CrossFit Open:
- Reduced power and speed — Pain alters how efficiently muscles fire, especially under heavy loads or fatigue.
- Poor Joint Positions — Mobility restrictions make movements like squatting and overhead work less efficient, while increasing injury risk.
- Decreased confidence — When you don’t trust a joint to move well, you hold back—even subconsciously.
- Slower recovery between workouts — Irritated tissues take longer to bounce back, making back-to-back Open weeks (or repeats) harder.
- Inconsistent performance — One workout feels fine, but the next one flares things up, and BOOM… momentum is lost.
You may still finish workouts—but not at the level your fitness actually allows.
The Open Exposes Gaps
The Open doesn’t cause these injuries—it reveals them.
It highlights where your body’s current capacity doesn’t quite match the demands you’re placing on it. That doesn’t mean you should stop training or skip the Open. It means your body is asking for a smarter approach.
Athletes who perform their best aren’t pain-free by accident. They’ve addressed the small issues early, maintained their movement quality, and built resilience alongside their strength and conditioning.
What to Focus on This Week
As the Open begins, here are a few reminders:
- Don’t ignore pain just because you can “push through it”
- Warm-ups matter more than ever—especially for problem areas
- Modify strategically when you need
- Pay attention to recovery between workouts, improve your sleep, fueling, and mobility work
You’ve put in the work—now it’s time to enjoy the Open. What you do over the next few weeks likely won’t drastically change your results, and that’s okay. But that doesn’t mean you should continue dealing with the same aches, pains, and limitations once the Open ends and you return to your normal routine.
Instead, use this season as a catalyst. Let it highlight what’s been holding you back and motivate you to finally address those nagging pains and injuries head-on. With the right approach, you can move better, recover faster, and feel stronger than you ever thought possible.
Imagine what it would feel like to train without pain. If it’s been a while since that felt realistic, know this—it is possible.
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