The Hidden Toll of Postpartum Return in Elite Sport: What Athletes Are Really Saying

Pregnancy and peak performance are no longer opposites.

More elite athletes are choosing to have children and are coming back stronger

winning medals, breaking records, and redefining what is possible.

 

But behind those headlines, I keep hearing similar stories from athletes after birth:

“It came down to luck.”

“I had to figure it out on my own.”

“It nearly broke me.”

Some were lucky enough to have excellent support

with performance teams that considered not just rehab and training,

but also mental health, logistics, and recovery.

 

Others had to carry the mental load alone,

coordinating care, managing training, arranging childcare,

and advocating for their own medical needs.

 

Many have told me the strain was so great they considered early retirement just to start a family.

Often, it was timing or chance

such as the slower pace brought on by COVID or a generous coach

that allowed them to return at all.

 

But how many talented athletes are we losing

simply because they do not have the right support system during and after pregnancy?

 

There is a better way forward.

 

Athletes deserve more than luck. They deserve a process.

 

I work with athletes and organisations to bring clinical,

performance-informed obstetric care into the heart of training.

 

This way, pregnancy and postpartum become structured,

supported phases — not periods of uncertainty or risk.

 

Performance teams benefit from medically guided collaboration.

Athletes receive tailored plans, clear timelines,

and the reassurance that they are not alone in navigating this transition.

 

No guesswork. No luck. Just a system that works.

 

If you are an athlete,

part of a high-performance team, or an organisation ready to build something better,

let’s have that conversation.