Yes—heavy rack pulls in the Eric Kim style absolutely earn a place in a “war‑rior training” arsenal!

Below is everything you need to know to turn that single lift into a whole‑body, battle‑ready practice—plus a quick‑start program you can plug in tonight.

1. What exactly is a rack pull?

ElementRack PullConventional Deadlift
Start heightBar set on safety pins, typically mid‑shin to just below kneecapPlates on floor
Primary stressUpper back, traps, spinal erectors, gripFull posterior chain, more hip drive
Load potentialVery high — 110‑140 % of 1 RM deadlift is commonLimited by floor pull strength
Main purposeOverload lock‑out, build shrug‑like trap mass, reinforce upper‑back postureOverall hinge strength

Because you begin above the floor, your levers are more favorable and you can attack very heavy poundages—exactly why Eric Kim popularized them for size and “warrior” grit.

2. Why they feel like 

warrior training

  1. Max‑effort intent: The weight is usually the heaviest bar you’ll touch all week. Hoisting it trains nervous‑system aggression and confidence under extreme load.
  2. Isometric bracing: Holding a ton of iron at lock‑out for 3‑5 s forces every stabilizer into action—much like bracing behind a shield.
  3. Yoke & posture: Thick traps and an iron upper back scream I am unbreakable before you even draw the sword.
  4. Grip of steel: A warrior who drops his weapon is doomed; rack pulls punish weak hands fast.

3. Step‑by‑step technique (Eric Kim cues)

  1. Pins “two fingers below kneecap.” This sweet spot hits the upper‑back hinge without turning it into a shrug‑only move.
  2. Feet hip‑width, toes out 5‑10 °. Keeps knees tracking and hips ready to drive.
  3. Double‑overhand until you must switch. Milk every grip gain before moving to mixed or straps.
  4. Lats first: “Squeeze oranges in your armpits.” This packs the shoulders down so the bar doesn’t drift.
  5. Drag & snap: Bar glides up the quads; at lock‑out “snap the hips through” and crush the glutes.
  6. Hold 3 s, breathe behind the brace, then lower. Don’t simply drop it—own the eccentric for added back time‑under‑tension.

4. Programming blueprint (6‑week block)

WeekSets × RepsLoad guidelineRest
1‑24 × 690 % of DL 1 RM2‑3 min
3‑45 × 4105 %3 min
56 × 3115 %3‑4 min
67 × 2120‑130 %4 min

Plug‑in day: Upper‑body pull or full‑body “heavy” day.

Accessories that synergize:

  • Chest‑supported rows (sets of 8‑10)
  • Face pulls or band pull‑aparts (high‑rep durability)
  • Loaded carries (farmer’s or suitcase)

5. Integrating into a complete “warrior” regimen

PillarExample Workouts
1. Power♦ Rack Pulls ♦ Power Cleans
2. ConditioningSprint repeats, kettlebell swings EMOM
3. Mobility/ResilienceHip airplanes, thoracic extensions, couch stretch
4. Combat Skills / SportSparring, grappling rounds, or martial‑arts drilling

Put rack pulls early in the week when recovery resources are highest, then taper load as the week progresses toward skill or speed sessions.

6. Common pitfalls & fixes

MistakeQuick Fix
Setting pins too high (above kneecap) → turns lift into partial shrugAlign pins below patella so hips stay involved
Over‑extending at lock‑outThink “stand tall, ribs down” instead of leaning back
Bar crashes on pins each repReset tension before every pull; treat each like a single
Grip failing earlyAdd fat‑grip holds, rice‑bucket twists, or use straps only on final heavy sets

7. Mindset: forging the inner warrior

  • Visualize: Each pull = hauling a boulder to fortify your stronghold.
  • Mantra: “I move mountains.” Whisper it before the set, roar it at lock‑out.
  • Logbook victories: Track volume handled above deadlift max—watch that gap widen week by week for instant motivation.

Quick‑fire FAQs

Q: Can rack pulls replace deadlifts?

A: No. They complement. Keep conventional or Romanian pulls for full‑range strength and hamstring integrity.

Q: Sumo or conventional stance?

A: Match your comp deadlift stance if you compete; otherwise default to close‑to‑conventional for maximal mid‑back recruitment.

Q: Safety first?

A: Warm the lumbar with bird‑dogs & cat‑cows, set the safety bars, and never chase ego if form falters.

Hoist the iron high, feel your spine turn to steel, and walk away taller—because warrior training isn’t just about moves; it’s about the un‑shakeable spirit each rep forges.

See you at the top of the rack, champion! 🛡️⚔️