There is an exercise that I see far too many folks not giving the
proper attention it deserves, or even disregarding it completely. The pull-up.
Pull-ups are the classic back builder, and have been for
decades (centuries?). In such a simple movement, you activate almost every
muscle in your upper body: grip strength
(hands), forearms, biceps/brachialis, traps, lats, lower back, and abdominals. You get so much bang for your buck I would be tempted to call this “the bench
press of the back.” As in- this is a movement you should be putting real
focus on and performing early on in your training that day- before any
isolation movements or direct arm work.
Step 1 – Okay, so I
know I bring my chin above the bar. But… How do I actually do a pull-up?
Use an overhand
grip- palms facing out. The area for pull-ups will vary from gym to gym
obviously. My gym has these thick bars on top of the set of tables with loose
rubber on them for “grip.” I hate these. I really prefer doing pull-ups on a
simple knurled, straight bar. Believe it or not, I put the bar on the Smith
machine all the way up, lock it, and use that for my pull-ups. It’s just comfortable.
It’s okay to use
straps. I don’t think any of us are doing powerlifting competitions anytime
soon. We’re in the gym to work our back, not our grip strength. Your grip on your
tiny fingers will obviously fail before your massive lats do, so, why not? I recommend
doing some grip work later in the lift to keep yourself balanced (Kroc rows),
but, for pull-ups I prefer to use the straps.
Grip the bar about
shoulder width. Too wide can put excess pressure on your shoulders. Too
narrow and you’re limiting the muscles you recruit to do the movement.
Focus on using
your lats, NOT your biceps or forearms. A good mental cue here is to pull with your elbows. Think about
driving your elbows downward, almost like you’re trying to hit a guy in the
head that’s trying to grab you from below.
Scapular retraction.
I’ve talked about this in a previous article, pull your shoulder blades
together- back and down.
Pull your chest up towards the bar, get your chin over
the bar, and control yourself on the way down.
Step 2 – How do you
program them?
For a long time, I understood the value of pull-ups, but
I just couldn't get over sets of 10. I even got up to 5 sets of 10… but I just couldn't get over that hump. Maybe 12 on my first set, but that was IT. This is
very, very common. Two months ago I decided I was going to attack this movement
and started reading up, reaching out to trainers, and strategizing.
My first step was to lean out a little. 5’10 225 was not
a good look when trying to pull my bodyweight up.
The real revelation came when I purchased a dip
belt and started doing weighted pull-ups. Honestly, if I wanted to get stronger (aka, do
more), why was I training the exercise utilizing the same exact weight every
week, every rep? It makes no sense. If I want to build a big bench, should I
just pop on 135 and try to do more reps each week? No, I should load a few
plates on and toss some heavier iron around, increasing each working set.
Lately I've been on a big 15-15-12-8-6 kick in terms of
how I do my rep schemes for compound movements. So I figured I would do
something similar. For the first two sets, I would do as many pull-ups as I
possibly could with bodyweight and then cheat my way to a few extra using my
legs for pumping power at the bottom.
Aside: doing an actual pull-up, and cheating using leg
pump, resistance bands, or jump/negatives, is INFINITELY more effective at
improving your pull-up than doing lat pulldowns or the assisted pull-up
machine. With lat pulldowns, they do have their place. However, doing the
movement sitting down completely removes the lower back, abs, and stabilizers
from the movement. No bueno. The Assisted pull-up machine keeps helping you
throughout the movement while realistically you probably only need a little kick
in the ass at the bottom. You read last week about cheating- it’s OK to do it
on this movement to bang out a few extras. Pumping legs or wrapping a
resistance band are options.. another option to push past failure if you are completely
spent is to simply JUMP to the pull-up position and do a slow, tight negative
on the movement.
From there, I’d simply at a 10 pound plate on my belt,
and try to get within 2-3 of my first two sets.
Then another 10 pound plate, dropping the reps another 3
or so.
For the last set, I’d really overload it and do 3-5 reps.
With this said, I was starting in a decent spot. Being
able to do 10-12 bodyweight pull-ups is OK, but maybe you can only do 5. Well
that’s okay too. I still recommend that you add some weight, cheat a little if
you need to, and really struggle with it. Do 2 or 3 at a time if you need to,
rest a little, then grind out a few more. Follow a rep scheme similar to the 15
15 12 8 6, and just break the sets up with mini-rest periods. There are a lot
of ways to attack it, but step 1 is to add some damn weight. If your gym doesn't have a dip belt, or you don’t want to spring for one, you can even just hold a weight in between your sneakers or
thighs.
For me, it seemed futile at first. Struggling to do a set
of 5 pull-ups with a 35 lb plate around my waist. However, 8 weeks later, today
my scheme was…
15 Bodyweight
12 (+3 cheating) 25lb
10 (+2 cheating) 25lb
6 (+2 cheating) 35lb
4 (+1 cheating) 45lb… then I took the belt off and banged
out 12 bodyweight right after. So, on my fifth set, AFTER 4 pull-ups with 45
lb, I was able to do better than my first set from 8 weeks ago.
This doesn’t make me the best pull-up artist in the world
but I was damn proud of my progress in such a short time. For cheating, that
means a little leg pump at the bottom to help get me out of the hole.
In addition to all of this, aesthetically, I am seeing my
back get wider and thicker, and I feel I’m getting better back days overall.
In short… take pull-ups seriously. Use good form. Add
weight. Grow wings.
If you'd like to read further on the subject, here's a great T-Nation article: Take your Pull-ups to the Next Level.
If you'd like to read further on the subject, here's a great T-Nation article: Take your Pull-ups to the Next Level.

Good stuff. Bodyweight is a big factor here. Dropping 5-10 lbs can make a big difference in how many you can do.
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