Runners
Capitol 10K, marathon buildups, trail miles. Focused work on calves, hamstrings, hip flexors, and glutes.
Train hard. Recover without leaving the house.
Jean Pierre Maurin, Licensed Massage Therapist, brings sports massage to homes across Austin and the surrounding area — so the work happens when your body needs it, not whenever you can fit another drive into your week.
Austin trains year-round. Loop miles around the lake before the heat sets in, long Hill Country climbs on the bike, heavy bars and pull-up rigs at the gym. The training is the easy part to commit to. Recovery is what usually gets skipped — and it's the part that keeps you showing up for the next session. In-home sports massage in Austin removes the biggest excuse: you don't have to go anywhere.
Call or text (210) 316-9055The hardest time to sit in traffic is right after a long run, a century ride, or race day. That's exactly when most people abandon the idea of bodywork. A mobile session flips it: Jean Pierre arrives at your door with the table, linens, and everything else. You walk from your shower to the table. When the session ends, you're already home — hydrating, feet up, done for the day. For runners coming off the Capitol 10K or a marathon training block, that convenience is the difference between recovery that happens and recovery you meant to get around to.
Every session starts with a short assessment: what you're training for, where the mileage is landing, what's tight, what's nagging. Then the work is built around that — not a fixed routine. Depending on what your body presents, a session may blend deep tissue work, myofascial release, and targeted attention to the usual suspects: calves, hamstrings, hips, quads, low back, neck, and shoulders. Pressure adapts to you. The goal is measurable relief — a looser stride, freer range of motion, less of that guarding tightness when you get up the next morning.
Capitol 10K, marathon buildups, trail miles. Focused work on calves, hamstrings, hip flexors, and glutes.
Long hours in the drops load the neck, shoulders, and low back as much as the legs.
Heavy pulls, overhead volume, and squat cycles leave dense, specific tightness.
You don't need a race calendar to earn recovery. If your body works hard, it qualifies.
Booking through a massage marketplace means a rotating roster, platform fees, and surge pricing. ATX Relief is one licensed therapist with a direct line. Jean Pierre learns your body over time — which hamstring always tightens first, how your shoulders respond after bike volume — so each session starts where the last one left off. You text him. He shows up. That's the whole system.
Focused work on one or two problem areas.
Full-body recovery with extra time where you need it.
The deep reset after a race or a heavy training block.
No travel fees, no surge pricing, no surprises. The price you see is the price you pay.
In-home sports massage is available in Austin, Round Rock, Pflugerville, Cedar Park, Leander, Hutto, and Manor. If you train here, Jean Pierre can get to you.
Call or text (210) 316-9055 to schedule — texting is easiest between workouts. Or email jpmaurin57@hotmail.com. Tell him what you're training for and when your next hard session or race is, and he'll help you time the massage around it.
Both have a place. Before a race, lighter work a few days out can help you feel loose without leaving you sore on the start line. After a race, many athletes wait a day or two, then book deeper recovery work once the acute soreness settles. Tell Jean Pierre your race date when you book and he'll help you time it.
No. Jean Pierre brings the massage table, linens, and supplies. All you need is enough floor space for the table and room for him to work around it — a living room or bedroom works fine.
They overlap, but sports massage is defined by the goal, not just the pressure. Sessions are built around your training — the sport, the load, and where your body is holding tension — and may blend deep tissue techniques, myofascial release, and lighter work as needed. Pressure always adapts to you.
It depends on your training load and how your body responds. Some clients book around key events — a race, a competition, the end of a heavy block — while others keep a regular monthly or biweekly rhythm through the season. Start with one session and build a cadence from there.