When David O'Brian ruptured his patellar tendon (dislocated his kneecap) on the pitch, a general practitioner happened to be right there to straighten his knee and bring the pain down. Surgery followed, and his surgeon gave him one clear instruction: get into physio as soon as possible, even small movements at this stage make a difference. That's what brought David through the doors to Physio at UFIT Singapore.
First Goal: Just Walking Again
David's first target wasn't football or padel, it was simply walking. The first six weeks on crutches and in a brace were, in his words, really tough. Getting him off the crutches and moving under his own power again was one of the biggest breakthroughs of the entire journey, according to his physiotherapist, Shawn Low. "Sometimes we forget that even walking is something we take for granted," Shawn says. "When we got him off the crutches, he felt like a free man again."
Testing the Comeback With Data
David has been working with Shawn for about a year since his post-operative patellar tendon repair. Rather than guessing when David was ready for the next stage, the team used UFIT's VALD testing system to objectively measure his progress and apply clear return-to-sport criteria before clearing him for running, then padel and football. An incidental fall set his rehab back slightly, but David's consistency and positive attitude kept things moving, and he was back running within five months.
Hitting Hurdles, Staying Consistent
As training moved into more dynamic, multi-directional movement, David started to feel like he was doing real exercise again. But new hurdles followed, muscles around the knee would flare up, sometimes taking six weeks of consistent work to settle. Shawn's coaching helped David reconnect with how his body actually felt, rather than just showing up to train. "There's all these little motivators along the way," David says.
Beyond the Physical
David describes the whole experience as humbling. "When you get to a point where you can't bend your knee and you can't walk, it really makes you grateful for what you have," he says. That humility became one of his biggest drivers, a determination not to stay stuck unable to do the things he loved, whether that's football, padel, or a run with his wife.
David's recovery shows what's possible when post-op rehab is guided by data, not guesswork. Explore physiotherapy at UFIT Singapore to start building your own return-to-sport plan.