The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 85

Your heel comes up when you squat because your ankle can't bend far enough — the fix depends entirely on where you feel it.

Stand barefoot facing a wall, big toe 10 cm from it. Lunge your knee forward to touch the wall with your heel flat. Where do you feel it? If it's a stretch in the back of your calf — your muscle is limiting you, and calf drops are your fix. If it's a sharp pinch at the front of your ankle — stop stretching and see a physical therapist.

  1. What's really happening: Your ankle can't bend far enough forward, so your body compensates by lifting your heel, rotating your foot out, or caving your knee in — and that's where the injury risk lives.
  2. What most people get wrong: Stretching your calf when the problem is a bony block at the front of the joint makes it worse, not better — and this is the most common clinical error.
  3. Start here: Do the 10-second wall test right now to identify whether you have a muscle problem or a joint problem — the two have completely different fixes.

Think of a rusty door hinge. If the hinge itself is stuck, oiling the door frame does nothing — you need to work on the hinge directly. But if the spring pulling the door shut is too tight, the hinge isn't the problem. Your ankle works the same way: a stiff joint needs hands-on treatment to restore the glide; a tight calf needs progressive loading to literally grow longer.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
Physio Engine — Ankle / Foot

Ankle Mobility

Assessment and Improvement — Dorsiflexion Restriction

HIGH CONVICTION

Red Flags — See a Doctor or Physical Therapist Immediately

Unremitting bone pain, especially at night — possible stress fracture of the talus, navicular, or fibula. Stop all loading. Urgent imaging needed.
Hard bony block with sharp anterior pinch — possible osteophyte (bone spur) or osteochondral lesion of the talus. Do NOT stretch. Orthopedic evaluation required.
Severe swelling, redness, warmth disproportionate to injury — possible DVT or acute inflammatory arthritis. Urgent medical referral, doppler ultrasound.
Skin color/temperature changes, allodynia — possible Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS). Refer to pain specialist.
Ankle still <9 cm on wall test after 4 weeks of rehab — potential structural pathology. Book an orthopedic assessment before continuing aggressive mobility work.
Do This Right Now
Stand barefoot facing a wall, big toe 10 cm away. Lunge your knee to the wall, keeping your heel flat. Feel a stretch in your calf? That's a muscle problem — calf drops are your fix. Feel a sharp pinch at the front of your ankle? Stop stretching and see a physical therapist first.

What Works

Ankle mobility treatment approaches — dark cinematic anatomy
Tier 1 — Strong Evidence
1. Mobilization with Movement (MWM) — Posterior Talar Glide HIGH
For arthrokinematic restriction (joint restriction — "front-of-ankle pinch" type). Effect size: SMD = 1.65 vs control. Over 93% of patients exceed the meaningful change threshold after MWM.
Exercise Prescription
Sets × Reps3–5 sets × 10–15 reps (40–60 total glides per session)
TechniqueWeight-bearing lunge. Therapist applies posterior talar glide with belt/strap. Hold 2–3 seconds per rep at end-range.
Frequency3–5 sessions/week × 4–6 weeks
ProgressionNon-weight-bearing → standing → step-lunge position
GoalImmediate intra-session ROM gain; retention over 4–6 weeks
2. Eccentric Calf Loading at Long Muscle Length HIGH
For soft tissue restriction (calf muscle tightness — "back-of-leg stretch" type). Triggers sarcomerogenesis: the muscle literally adds new structural units of length under eccentric load. Superior to static stretching for sustained ROM gains.
Exercise Prescription
Sets × Reps3 sets × 15 reps
TechniqueStand on edge of a step. Rise on both feet, lower slowly on one foot only. 3–4 second controlled descent. Start bodyweight, progress to backpack/weight.
Frequency3 sessions/week × 6–8 weeks
ProgressionBilateral → unilateral. Add load when 30 bilateral reps tolerated pain-free.
GoalStructural fascicle lengthening measurable at 4–8 weeks via WBLT
Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence + Adjuncts
3. Static Calf Stretching (WBLT Position) MODERATE
Valid adjunct but primarily alters stretch tolerance rather than tissue architecture. Effective at high dosage.
Exercise Prescription
Sets × Duration3 sets × 30–75 second holds (knee straight = gastrocnemius; knee bent = soleus)
Frequency3–7×/week — total time under stretch >1,200 seconds/week
NoteA 30-second stretch twice daily = ~420 seconds — well below threshold. 10-minute daily sessions are the minimum effective dose.
4. Foam Rolling + Static Stretching Combined MODERATE
Combination superior to either modality alone for immediate ROM. Use as warm-up before stretching or eccentric work.
5. BFR-Augmented Calf Training EMERGING
For maintaining calf strength/mass during restricted rehab. Protocol: 30-15-15-15 reps at 40–80% LOP, 2–3×/week. Specific DF-ROM improvement data: unavailable — use for strength preservation.

Exercise Prescription

See Tier 1 exercise prescriptions above. Key principle: match the exercise to the restriction type. Posterior calf stretch on WBLT → eccentrics + stretching. Anterior joint pinch → MWM only (no stretching).

What Doesn't Work

Aggressive calf stretching for anterior bony impingement — This is the most common clinical error. If you feel a hard bony block at the front of your ankle, passive stretching forces dorsiflexion against the osteophyte, exacerbating periosteal inflammation. The block doesn't respond to tissue lengthening — it requires joint mobilization or surgical consultation.

Non-weight-bearing goniometry as your primary test — Measuring dorsiflexion on a treatment table misses the true functional limitation. The WBLT must be your primary outcome measure.

The Verdict

Your heel comes up when you squat because your ankle can't bend far enough forward — the fix depends entirely on where you feel the block.
Think of a rusty door hinge. If the hinge itself is seized, oiling the door frame does nothing — you need to free the hinge directly. But if the spring pulling the door shut is too stiff, the hinge isn't your problem. Your ankle works the same way: a stiff joint needs a physical therapist's hands to restore the glide; a tight calf needs slow, heavy exercises to literally grow longer at the structural level — a process called sarcomerogenesis, where your muscle adds new units of length under load.
  • 1
    What's really happening: Your ankle can't bend far enough forward, so your body borrows the movement by lifting your heel, rotating your foot outward, or caving your knee in — and that's where the injury risk accumulates over time.
  • 2
    What most people get wrong: Stretching your calf when the real problem is a bony block at the front of the joint makes the problem worse — and this is the most common clinical error in ankle rehab.
  • 3
    Start here: The 10-second wall test tells you which category you're in — the two types of restriction have completely different fixes, and applying the wrong one wastes weeks.
Best For

Adults with restricted dorsiflexion causing heel rise during squats, running compensation, or difficulty navigating stairs. Post-ankle sprain patients with residual stiffness. Athletes needing to maintain training depth.

Skip If

You have a hard bony block at the front of your ankle — see a physical therapist first. Acute fracture, active joint infection, DVT, or CRPS require medical clearance before any mobility work.

Return to Training Criteria

These are binary checkboxes — all must pass before removing restrictions on training or sport. No single criterion is sufficient alone.

Training note: Heel wedges (2–4 cm) are valid during rehabilitation — they temporarily provide the dorsiflexion the ankle can't yet achieve, allowing continued deep squatting without biomechanical compensation. Gradually reduce wedge height as WBLT improves.

How Confident Are We?

Conviction HIGH

Supported by the APTA 2021 Clinical Practice Guidelines (Martin et al., JOSPT), MWM meta-analysis (SMD=1.65), and ultrasound-confirmed sarcomerogenesis from eccentric loading RCTs. The assessment standard (WBLT) has ICC 0.80–0.99 with an established MDC of 1.5–1.9 cm across multiple validation studies.

What would change the MWM recommendation?
A large-scale (N>200, multi-center, 12–24 week) RCT directly comparing heavy eccentric loading vs. weight-bearing MWM for patients with confirmed arthrokinematic restriction, with blinded kinematic analysis and diagnostic ultrasound tracking fascicle length. If heavy eccentrics alone resolved the anterior joint-line pinching, MWM would be downgraded.
What would change the eccentric loading recommendation?
A mechanistic RCT showing that stretching volume alone (matched for time-under-tension) produces equivalent fascicle length changes to eccentric loading in the same population would equalize these interventions. Currently, the ultrasound data clearly favors eccentric protocols for structural tissue remodeling.

Sources

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

85 Strong evidence
80–100Strong evidence ◀
60–79Mixed but supportive
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

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