---
title: "A Simple Post-Game Recovery Routine"
slug: "post-game-recovery-routine"
date: "2026-06-25"
category: "Recovery"
canonical_url: "https://www.nervrecovery.com/au/journal/post-game-recovery-routine"
markdown_url: "https://www.nervrecovery.com/journal/post-game-recovery-routine/markdown"
---

# A Simple Post-Game Recovery Routine

> The hours after full time decide how you feel at the next session. Here is a simple, repeatable post-game routine that works.

- Published: 2026-06-25
- Category: Recovery
- Canonical URL: https://www.nervrecovery.com/au/journal/post-game-recovery-routine

A hard game leaves you with tired legs, a wired nervous system, and a body that needs to refuel and repair. What you do in the hours after full time has a real effect on how you pull up the next day — and most of it is simple. Here is a repeatable post-game routine you can run after any match.

For the principles behind it, see our [Recovery 101 guide](/journal/recovery-101). This is the practical, hour-by-hour version.

## At a glance

| Time after full time | Focus |
|---|---|
| 0–15 min | Keep moving, gentle cool-down |
| 15–60 min | Rehydrate and refuel |
| 1–2 hours | Compression and light mobility |
| Evening | Wind down the nervous system |
| Overnight | Sleep — the main event |

## Right after full time: cool down

Do not go from sprinting to sitting in a car seat. A few minutes of easy walking or a gentle jog lets your heart rate come down gradually and starts the transition out of competition mode. Add some light, easy mobility for the areas that took the most load. Nothing forced — this is about easing down, not stretching hard on fatigued muscles.

## Within the hour: refuel and rehydrate

You have lost fluid and burned through fuel. Start replacing both:

- **Rehydrate** with water plus electrolytes rather than forcing down litres of plain water.
- **Refuel** with a meal or snack that combines carbohydrate and protein — carbs to restock energy, protein to support repair.

Getting food and fluid in reliably is one of the highest-value things you can do, and it is easy to skip in the post-game chaos.

## One to two hours later: compression and mobility

Once you are home and fed, this is the window for a dedicated leg recovery session. Heavy, fatigued legs are the classic post-match feeling, and whole-leg compression is well suited to it.

- **Compression boots** apply a timed pressure wave from foot to thigh while you sit still, hands-free. Fifteen to twenty minutes while you eat or wind down is an easy add. See the [compression boots guide](/journal/compression-boots-guide).
- **A massage gun** is useful for targeting one or two specific areas that are especially tight — a calf, a quad — before or after the boots. See the [massage gun guide](/journal/massage-gun-guide).

If you only do one thing in this window, make it the compression — it is effortless and targets exactly what a game leaves behind.

## Evening: settle the nervous system

After a competitive game your nervous system is still switched on, which is why sleep can be hard the night after a match. Help it down-shift: lower the lights, get off your phone in the half hour before bed, and stop replaying every moment of the game. Calming the system is part of recovery, not separate from it.

## Overnight: sleep

This is the part that matters most. The bulk of repair happens while you sleep, so protecting it does more than any device. We go deeper in [sleep and muscle recovery](/journal/sleep-and-muscle-recovery). Aim to be in bed at a sensible hour, even after a late finish.

## The next day

Lean toward gentle active recovery rather than another hard hit: an easy walk, light mobility, maybe another short compression session if your legs are still heavy. We cover the balance in [active recovery vs passive recovery](/journal/active-recovery-vs-passive-recovery).

## Frequently asked questions

**What should you do immediately after a game?**
Keep moving with an easy cool-down rather than stopping abruptly, then start rehydrating and refuelling within the hour with fluids, electrolytes, carbohydrate, and protein.

**How do footballers recover after a match?**
A typical routine is cool down, refuel and rehydrate, a leg-focused recovery session using compression and targeted massage, calming the nervous system in the evening, and prioritising sleep overnight.

**When should you use compression boots after a game?**
A good window is one to two hours after full time, once you are home and fed. Fifteen to twenty minutes of sequential compression suits the heavy-legged feeling a game leaves behind.

**Why can't I sleep after a game?**
Competition leaves your nervous system switched on. Lowering stimulation in the evening — dimmer lights, less screen time, not replaying the game — helps it down-shift so you can sleep.

## The bottom line

A good post-game routine is simple and repeatable: cool down instead of stopping dead, refuel and rehydrate within the hour, run a leg-focused compression session once you are home, settle your nervous system in the evening, and protect your sleep. Do those consistently and you will pull up far better than relying on any single gadget.

For sequential leg compression, see [NERV Squeeze](/products/nerv-squeeze). For targeted percussion, see [NERV Punch](/products/nerv-punch).
