Understanding if roller massage prior to a run can mitigate fatigue-related decrements in muscle force production during prolonged running is important because of the association between fatigue and running-related injury. The authors investigated whether a bout of roller massage prior to running would (1)mitigate fatigue-related increases in vertical average load rate and free moment of the ground reaction force of running and (2)mitigate decreases in maximal countermovement jump height. Repeated-measures study. Laboratory. A total of 14 recreational endurance athletes (11 men and 3 women) volunteered for the study. A 12.5-minute foam roller protocol for the lower extremities and a fatiguing 30-minute treadmill run. Vertical average load rate, free moment, and maximal jump height before (PRE) and after (POST) the fatiguing treadmill run on separate experimental days: once where participants sat quietly prior to the fatiguing run (REST) and another where the foam roller protocol was performed prior to the run (ROLL). A 2-way multiple analysis of variance found no significant differences in vertical average load rate, free moment, and jump height between PRE/POST times in both REST/ROLL conditions. The authors concluded that recreational endurance athletes maintain running mechanics and jump performance after a fatiguing run regardless of prerun roller massage and may not rely on prerun roller massage as a form of injury prevention.