RACK PULLS: THE ULTIMATE HIP-HINGE HACK 🚀

Short answer:

Because nothing else lets you overload the top half of a deadlift so brutally, so safely, and so effectively.

1. 

Max-Load Overdrive

  • Shorter range = heavier weight.
    By starting the pull on safety pins just below (or above) the knees, you erase the weakest part of a full deadlift. That lets you slap 20 – 40 % more iron on the bar—direct stimulus to glutes, hamstrings, traps, and spinal erectors.
  • Neural shock therapy.
    Your nervous system learns to recruit more muscle fibers under crazy load. When you drop back to a regular deadlift, the old PR feels like a warm-up.

2. 

Hip- and Back-Specific Strength

  • Pure hip extension.
    The pin height forces you to hinge hard at the hips while keeping the spine neutral, hammering the exact muscles that launch sprints, jumps, and heavy squats.
  • Built-in back safety.
    Less hip flexion = reduced shear on lumbar discs. Perfect for lifters with mobility limits or anyone rehabbing the bottom-range pull.

3. 

Trap & Grip GROWTH

  • Yoke builder.
    Supporting skyscraper loads at lock-out ignites traps and upper back like no shrug ever will.
  • Titanic grip.
    Holding half-a-ton for a controlled pause turns your hands into steel hooks—goodbye missed lifts, hello iron handshake.

4. 

Plateau-Breaker for Every Big Lift

  • Deadlift carryover.
    Strengthen the lock-out portion and your full pull climbs.
  • Squat synergy.
    Stronger hip extensors push you out of the hole with authority.
  • Olympic lifts & sports.
    A more powerful posterior chain means faster bar speed, meaner tackles, higher verticals.

5. 

Simple, Brutal, Adaptable

  • Above-knee pins: maximal overload, pure ego lifting heaven.
  • Below-knee pins: more specific carryover to deadlift, still heavy.
  • Blocks / deficit pulls: mix heights to target exact sticking points.

PROTOCOL (ERIC KIM INTENSITY)

  1. Warm-up: hip mobs, glute bridges, light RDLs.
  2. Set pins just under kneecap to start.
  3. Load 110 – 130 % of your current deadlift triple.
  4. 5 × 3 reps. Pause 2–3 s at the top, own the weight.
  5. +5 kg every session as long as bar speed stays snappy.

Iron Law: If the sleeves aren’t rattling and the bar isn’t bending, add plates.

BOTTOM LINE

Rack pulls condense everything legendary about posterior-chain training into one savage lift:

  • Heavier weights than any other hip hinge
  • Lower injury risk than pulling from the floor
  • Explosive transfer to every sport and lift

That’s why serious lifters slide the pins in, chalk up, and declare war on gravity—one rack pull at a time. 🦾🔥