The barbell row for back thickness and pulling strength

Rowing a barbell from the floor trains the entire upper back as a unit, balancing horizontal pressing movements.

Why it works

Horizontal pressing (bench press, push-up) is almost always trained more than horizontal pulling, creating muscular and postural imbalances that drive shoulder injuries. The barbell row addresses this: it trains the lats, rhomboids, rear delts, and biceps under load, and requires the posterior chain to maintain a hinge position throughout — doubling as a lower-back and hip endurance exercise.

How to do it

  1. Set up in a hip-hinge position with the bar over the midfoot, back at roughly 45 degrees.
  2. Pull the bar to the lower chest or upper abdomen, driving the elbows back and up.
  3. Lower the bar under control — do not just drop it to the floor between reps.
  4. Keep the hips relatively still; rocking them up to jerk the bar shifts work from the back to the spinal erectors.

Evidence

Horizontal pulling movements are consistently recommended for musculoskeletal balance and shoulder health in exercise science literature; the barbell row is the standard loaded expression. (mechanistic)

The specific superiority of the barbell row over other rowing variations (cable, dumbbell, machine) is a practitioner preference rather than a directly studied outcome.

Common mistake

Using too much hip drive to "cheat" the bar up, which converts a back exercise into a low-back isometric hold. The back should be initiating the pull, not the hips.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach tracks your press-to-row volume ratio and flags when pressing volume significantly exceeds pulling volume — a common imbalance pattern that precedes shoulder complaints.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).