The Pull Up
The Pull Up
In the vast majority of people, pull up performance is limited by body composition, meaning the
lack of muscle mass or the presence of excess body fat (or a combination of the two). A
strategy around improving this component of your fitness will have the greatest impact on our
ability to unlock your ability to perform the pull up. The tools you use to do that make all the
difference in how effective your efforts will be.
Program Details
Day 1 (Max Day)- The first session of the training week requires that you perform 3 max effort
sets of ring rows. In this case, “max” means the most reps you can perform with the best form
you are capable of. Keep your body planked out and stable during the movement, keep your
chest high, squeeze the shoulder blades together at the top of each rep, control the lowering
phase, and lower all the way down until your arms are fully extended. Terminate the set when
your reps fail to meet this quality standard.
Day 2 (Hypertrophy Day)- The training rep target for “Hypertrophy Day” will be determined by
your best performance on your last max day. You will take 70% of your best set (rounding up if
needed) and perform 5 sets at this rep count. The same rules apply in terms of form quality and
technical standards.
Day 3 (Ascending Ladders)- A ladder is a series of sets, each increasing in reps. Ladders
provide an opportunity for you to perform a large amount of high quality reps while periodically
approaching high effort sets. It is important to make sure you take a strict 30 second rest
between sets.
To perform the ladder, start with a single repetition, rest 30 seconds, then perform 2 repetitions,
rest 30 seconds and perform 3 repetitions. Continue to increase the reps per set by 1 until you
are confident that you will no longer be able to complete the next set, or you fail to complete
the target rep count, after which rest 30 seconds and start over at a single rep, then repeat the
process. The process of going from 1 rep to your top set counts as a single ladder. You will
perform 3 of these.
1. 1/2/3/4/5/6 (struggled on 6th rep, probably could not complete a 7th set)
As you progress, you will be able to go higher in the ladder, but more often than not, you will
see an increased consistency across your ladders. You can also gauge progress by taking a
look at the total reps you are able to achieve between all 3 ladders during the workout.
Progression
Once you have the rings positioned to where your “max” is between 8 and 15, you will keep
them in this position for ALL your training days until your max exceeds 15 repetitions. When
this happens, lower the rings 8-12” and perform the program until you are able to exceed 15
reps for a max at the current height. Continue to lower the ring 8-12” every time you are able to
exceed 15 rep. Once you have progressed to the point where you can’t lower the rings
anymore without resting your back on the ground, continue progressing by elevating your feet
8-12” at a time, every time you are able to exceed 15 reps in your max.