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The Girl Factor
Any concerns over gender are counteracted
by reputation and referrals.
If a team member or friend has
raved about a therapist’s effect on
performance, chances are the client
is open-minded by the time he walks
through the door.
“So much of it is referrals—people
come in with an idea about you already.
I never had that problem of
gender being an issue,” Ney says.
“It was just whether a person was
qualified and knew what they were
doing.”
But what about sheer strength?
Do men assume that a woman will
knead like … a girl? Linden described
one power lifter who weighed 300
pounds and competitively squatted
more than 1,100 pounds.
“That’s a big guy,” she says. “He
had an old adhesion, and when he
came in after his coach had made
the recommendation, he looked at
me with terror in his eyes and asked
me how much it was going to hurt.
His coaches had told him about
me.”
Not that strength isn’t a factor—
Brutsaert points to the harsh day-to-day demands of sports massage,
noting that cardiovascular fitness
is more of a concern than strength.
With lifting and turning and hard
muscle, sports massage is harder on
the therapist’s body than the typical
massage. And Linden adds that she
has met women who were not strong
enough in their forearms or hands to
work on the kind of dense muscle on
professional athletes.
“You can optimize what you can do
with leverage,” she says, “but if you
have that much beef [to massage],
you’ve got to have some strength.”
If there were questions from athletes,
these women all agreed that
one session was all it took to quell
any doubts.
“I haven’t ever had a new player
that doesn’t come in and say, ‘Oh no,
she’s never going to be able to get in
there deep enough,’” Calabrese reports.
“Then afterwards they say,
‘Oh, gosh you were better than any
guy I’ve had.’ It’s about your touch.”
“We get phone calls saying, ‘I want
a male because my experience is
women aren’t strong enough,’” Vandenbos
says. “Then they’ll come in
and say, ‘Wow, I never knew a woman
could work that deep.’ [When]
we take care of ourselves, we tend
to be stronger and have more endurance.”
Ultimately, the work speaks for itself.
Athletes and coaches measure
success in performance.
“The proof is in the pudding,”
says Linden. “If you have something
substantial to offer and it resolves an
issue for someone, they don’t care
what gender you are.”
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