Today’s Workout

⚡ Pull–Dip–Drive 2.0

(Upper strength + posterior chain endurance + sled power)

    WARM-UP (8–10 min)

    Goal: Prep shoulders, hamstrings, and CNS for full-body output.

        300m Row or 15 Cal Bike

        10 Scap Pull-Ups

        10 Band Pull-Aparts

        10 Arm Circles (forward/backward)

        10 Hip Hinges (PVC or empty bar)

        2 x 20m Sled Drags (light, warm-up pace)

MAIN BLOCK – Strength & Volume Flow

    5 Rounds:

        Pull-Ups – 6 reps (strict, full range)

        Scale: 90° Pulls or band-assisted.

        Tempo: 2 sec up / 2 sec down for control.

    Ring Dips – 9 reps

        Scale: Feet-assisted or low rings.

        Tempo: 3-sec lower / fast press.

    Romanian Deadlifts (RDLs) – 12 reps

        Barbell, Dumbbells, or Sandbag

        Focus: 3-sec eccentric, full glute lockout at top.

Optional: slight pause at bottom for added tension.

        Rest 90–120 sec between rounds.

    💡 6–9–12 = structured pull/push/hinge pattern — stability, drive, and endurance all in one.

CONDITIONING BLOCK – Sled Power & Control

        6 Total Lengths:

        3 x Forward Sled Pushes – 25m (heavy, strong stride)

        3 x Reverse Sled Drags – 25m (lighter, smooth pace)
        Rest 45–60 sec between lengths.

        💬 Forward = posterior drive. Reverse = knee health + quad balance.

FINISHER – “Grip + Core Control”

    3 rounds:

        Static Dead Hang (Pull-Up Bar) – 30 sec

        Plank Shoulder Taps – 20 total

        Reverse Plank Hold (hips high) – 30 sec
        Rest 30 sec between rounds.

COACH’S NOTES

        12-rep RDLs build posterior endurance and connective tissue resilience.

        Maintain posture and tempo on all lifts — no rushing, no collapsing at the top.

        Sleds add functional drive while keeping joint stress low.

        Grip & core finisher ties everything together — a quiet challenge that pays off long-term.

        This is a grind day — it’s about sustaining rhythm under tension, not max effort.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *