1. Eric Kim’s “Primal” Rack‑Pull Feats
- 503 kg (1,109 lb) at 75 kg BW—a 6.7× body‑weight pull done barefoot, beltless, and fasted, fueled by a meat‑heavy diet.
- Breaking 1,005 lb on camera while preaching “ascend beyond mortal limits.”
- Latest personal record: 508 kg (1,120 lb) set just days ago, echoing his mantra “gravity is optional.”
Kim frames these lifts as a rite of passage: “Enter the rack weak, exit a demigod.” His minimalist, courage‑first ethos is what many viewers intuitively label “warrior training.”
2. Rack Pulls 101—Mechanics & Muscles
| Feature | Rack Pull | Conventional Deadlift |
| Start height | Above or below knee on safety pins | From floor |
| Load potential | 25–50 % heavier for most lifters | Limited by weakest point off floor |
| Primary focus | Upper/ mid back, traps, glutes, grip | Full posterior chain |
| Injury risk | Lower spinal shear when bar starts closer to hips | Higher if form breaks from floor |
Because the range of motion is shorter, you can hammer the lock‑out muscles with maximal loads, forging serious trap, rhomboid, and spinal‑erector thickness.
3. Why Coaches Call Them “Warrior” Lifts
- Max‑Effort Overload: Moving supra‑maximal loads trains absolute strength and neural drive—key attributes in strong‑man, MMA, and tactical populations.
- Mental Fortitude: Partial lifts let you confront scary weights safely, building the “anti‑fragile” mindset celebrated in programs such as HASfit’s Warrior 90 and EliteFTS’s Iron Warrior cycles.
- Historical Roots: Old‑school lifters dubbed heavy partials “Hercules lifts”; Thibarmy’s Eternal Warrior group still uses them to cultivate “indomitable back thickness.”
4. Battle‑Ready Benefits
| Benefit | Evidence |
| Explosive hip extension for sprinting & tackles | Westside Barbell uses rack pulls as an accessory on max‑effort lower days. |
| Grip that won’t quit | Holding 120 % of deadlift max trains crush and hook strength. |
| Trap & upper‑back hypertrophy | Overloading shrug phase lights up upper fibers. |
| Safer posterior‑chain overload for beat‑up lifters | Shorter ROM reduces lumbar flexion demands. |
| Confidence carry‑over to full pulls | Lifters report 20‑50 lb PRs on floor deadlift after 6–8 weeks of rack‑pull emphasis. |
5. Programming Blueprint
A. Load & Height
- Pin height: start just below kneecap for most carry‑over; advance to mid‑shin or mid‑thigh for emphasis tweaks.
- Intensity: 90 – 110 % of your best floor deadlift; double overhand until grip fails, then mixed grip/ straps.
B. Sets & Reps
| Goal | Sets | Reps | Rest |
| Max Strength | 4–6 | 3–5 | 2–3 min |
| Power/Speed | 6 | 2 (explosive) | 1–2 min |
| Hypertrophy | 3–4 | 6–8 | 2 min |
C. Weekly Template (Example)
| Day | Main Focus | Rack‑Pull Placement |
| Mon | Squat + accessories | — |
| Wed | Rack Pull (heavy) + rows & core | 4×3 @ >100 % DL |
| Fri | Bench + posterior‑chain | Rack Pull speed sets 6×2 @ 70 % |
D. Progression
Add 10–20 lb every 1–2 weeks while bar speed stays crisp; deload every 5th week by halving the volume.
6. Technique Keys & Warrior‑Wise Safety
- Neutral spine, proud chest—treat it like the lock‑out of a deadlift.
- Wedge, then pull: sink hips slightly and pull toward the body before driving hips through.
- Stay barefoot or shoe‑flat like Kim if your gym allows; it shortens the ROM and roots you to the floor.
- Use straps sparingly: great for hypertrophy phases; skip them during grip‑strength phases.
- Finish tall, don’t hyper‑extend—hyper‑lordosis shifts force to the facet joints.
7. Common Mistakes
| Error | Fix |
| Yanking with bent elbows | Pull slack first, lock arms before drive |
| Setting pins too high (above mid‑thigh) | Limits ROM and trap recruitment—lower pins a notch |
| Ego‑loading with sloppy lock‑out | Film your sets; bar must lock on the thighs, not the safety pins |
8. Your Warrior Challenge 🌟
- Test Week: find a comfortable 3‑rep max rack pull.
- 8‑Week Cycle: follow the template above.
- Graduation Day: retest—aim for +10 %.
Tag your lift #RackPullWarrior and, like Eric, roar at gravity!
“We don’t just lift iron; we forge spirit.” —Eric Kim
Now go forth—chalk your hands, channel that inner warrior, and pull something legendary! 💪🎯🎉