Row Every Day: The Thick Back Solution

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ROW SPECIALIZATION​

Most lifters have achy shoulders, poor posture, and backs so narrow they disappear when they turn sideways. So what's the best way to build a thicker back, improve posture, and prevent future shoulder issues? Do a row every time you train.

To add slabs of muscle to your back, you'll have to specialize. To add muscle quickly, increase training frequency and volume, and add new exercises to your back training while dialing back in other areas.





Let's Break It Down​

INCREASE TRAINING FREQUENCY​

To build a lagging muscle group, short-term bouts of higher training frequency work best. By training a row or horizontal pulling movement every time you hit the gym you're doing three things:
  1. Triggering protein synthesis within target muscle groups more often. More protein synthesis can drive faster gains in size when recovery is sufficient.
  2. Improving motor learning. The more you train a function, the more efficient your body will become. When you row, you're retracting your shoulders, helping to pull them back out of the internally-rotated position where you spend most of your time. Frequent rowing can unwind the damage of unbalanced training and poor posture.
  3. Shocking the muscles. If you've been training back once or twice per week for years on end, increasing frequency can trigger a cascade of adaptations to grow stronger and bigger.

INCREASE TRAINING VOLUME​

By increasing training volume you'll create a more significant training response for your muscles to adapt. This leads directly into the next two points of varying intensity and decreasing volume elsewhere.

VARY INTENSITY​

When volume and training frequency both increase, it's necessary to adapt the intensity of exercise. When training a horizontal pull or rowing variation each day you'll need to vary the intensity. In this program, we'll use a variety of training stimuli to maximize the effectiveness of training without frying your central nervous system (CNS) and spine. I'll list the exercises in order of how neurally demanding they are on your body:

Intensive Heavy and Explosive Compound Movements​

These exercises are performed with high resistance and/or explosive movement. This creates more demand on your CNS so they're best done early in your workouts.


▶️ Moderate-Heavy Resistance and Volume​

These exercises can be done both heavy and light for high volume. They're not as intense as most barbell lifts yet still create large amounts of total body stress.

ONE-ARM DUMBBELL ROW VARIATIONS:​

SPLIT-STANCE ROW​


PRONATED-GRIP DUMBBELL ROW​


DUMBBELL "J" ROW​


▶️ Extensive, Volume-Based Muscle Builders​

These exercises use less resistance and are primarily focused on feeling your target muscles doing the work for a maximum mind-muscle connection. These are less stressful and can be done more frequently to improve overall muscular development.


CABLE ROW WITH PRE-SET ISO-HOLD​


CABLE ROW WITH CLOSE GRIP​


INVERTED ROW (SHOWN HERE WITH PAUSE)​


BATWING ROW​


REVERSE FLYE​


FARMER'S WALK (FOR TIME)​

Farmer's walks can differ significantly based on load and time under tension. During this program you'll focus more on longer duration sets rather than heavy sets. You'll vary exercise intensity and volume throughout the program to maximize gains without overwhelming your body.

Decrease Volume Elsewhere​

You can do anything, but not everything. The biggest mistake lifters make when trying to build a lagging body part is keeping the volume on other muscle groups the same.
Remember, it's not what you train, it's what you can recover from that will dictate your progress. Your body has a limited ability to recover. You must dial back both intensity and volume on other body parts to maximize recover during a specialization phase.

Why Not Vertical Pulling Exercises?​

Exercises like chin-ups and lat pulldowns are great, but they shouldn't be your top priority for building a THICK back and healthy shoulders. Sacrilege? Maybe.
If you're like most lifters, you've dealt with achy shoulders. Your programming as a whole has had far more chest and shoulder-dominant work. In an attempt to build the coveted V-taper you've done lots of pulldowns and pull-ups.
This is logical, but often causes problems. The lats themselves help with internal rotation. When you hammer out pull-ups and get sloppy with technique to get your chin over the bar, you end up crashing your shoulders forward, irritating the front side of your shoulders more.
If you're like most people, you also spend the majority of your day perched over a keyboard or hunched over your phone like a 12-year old finding his first nudie website. When you combine unbalanced training, poor posture, and overdeveloped anterior delts and pecs with a weak set of traps, rhomboids, and lats, the last thing you need is more internal rotation.

You need to focus on horizontal pulling and dial back internal rotation-based exercises, even pull-ups and chin-ups. Sure, those should be part of your program, but most lifters follow inherently unbalanced programs most of the time. When combined with an internally-rotating posture, it's beneficial to dial back vertical pulling exercises and instead focus on horizontal pulling exercises like rows.

Sample 4-Week Training Plan​

This plan varies intensity, volume, and subtle aspects like grip to provide a novel stimulus. Follow the program for four weeks, then get back to a more balanced training program.

WEEKS 1 AND 2​

DAY ONE: UPPER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
AIncline Barbell Bench Press552 min.
BBarbell Bentover Row4690 sec.
C1Dumbbell Bench Press4101 min.
C2One-Arm Dumbbell Row4101 min.
DPull-Up or Lat Pulldown2121 min.
ECable Face Pull41230 sec.
FFarmer's Walk22 min.1 min.

DAY TWO: LOWER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
AFront Squat462 min.
BDumbbell Bulgarian Split Squat38/leg45 sec./leg
CSnatch-Grip RDL28-101 min.
DLeg Press3151 min.
E1Inverted Row31245 sec.
E2TRX Fallout or Ab Wheel Rollout31245 sec.

DAY THREE: UPPER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
APronated-Grip Batwing Row (3 sec. contraction)3121 min.
BBarbell Overhead Press551 min.
C1One-Arm Incline Bench Press3845 sec.
C2Dumbbell Sawing Row3845 sec.
DWide-Grip Seated Row3121 min.
E1Seated Cable Face Pull31530 sec.
E2Seated Dumbbell Triceps Extension31530 sec.

DAY FOUR: LOWER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
A1Box Jump5545 sec.
A2Close-Grip Inverted Row31045 sec.
BPendlay Row3590 sec.
CDeadlift352 min.
DDumbbell Step-Up310/leg1 min.
EGoblet Squat22045 sec.

WEEKS 3 AND 4​

DAY ONE: UPPER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
AIncline Barbell Bench Press552 min.
BSupinated Barbell Bentover Row4690 sec.
C1Dumbbell Bench Press4101 min.
C2Pronated-Grip Dumbbell Row4101 min.
DRing Chin-Up or Underhand Grip Pulldown2121 min.
ECable Face Pull51030 sec.
FFarmer's Walk32 min1 min.

DAY TWO: LOWER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
AFront Squat44-690 sec.
BDumbbell Bulgarian Split Squat28/leg45 sec./leg
CSnatch-Grip RDL38-101 min.
DLeg Press3151 min.
E1Inverted Row41245 sec.
E2TRX Fallout or Ab Wheel Rollout38-1245 sec.

DAY THREE: UPPER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
APronated-Grip Batwing Row (3 sec. contraction)3121 min.
BBarbell Overhead Press552 min.
C1One-Arm Incline Bench Press3845 sec.
C2Dumbbell Sawing Row312/10/845 sec.
DClose-Grip Seated Row4121 min.
E1Seated Cable Face Pull41530 sec.
E2Seated Dumbbell Triceps Extension41530 sec.

DAY FOUR: LOWER BODY​

ExerciseSetsRepsRest
A1Box Jump3545 sec.
A2Close-Grip Inverted Row31245 sec.
BPendlay Row3590 sec.
CDeadlift432 min.
DDumbbell Step-Up310/leg1 min.
EGoblet Squat22045 sec.
FDumbbell Renegade Row26/side1 min.
 

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