Sled Pull
The sled pull builds posterior-chain strength while keeping impact low. It’s great for glute and hamstring development and can be done forward with a harness or backward for quad emphasis.
Muscles Worked
Primary Muscles
- Glutes
- Hamstrings
Secondary Muscles
- Calves
- Upper Back
- Core
How to Perform
- 1
Setup: Attach a strap or rope and stand tall.
- 2
Brace: Keep the core tight and shoulders back.
- 3
Pull: Walk backward or forward with steady steps.
- 4
Drive: Push through the heels for posterior focus.
- 5
Finish: Maintain a steady tempo to the end.
Common Mistakes
Leaning Too Far
Stay tall to keep tension.
Short Choppy Steps
Use smooth, consistent steps.
Rope Slack
Keep the line tight.
Too Heavy
Overload ruins conditioning quality.
Training Notes
Sled Pull is a full‑body pattern that rewards crisp technique more than brute force. Keep the core braced, move with purpose, and avoid rushing through reps. Consistent rhythm builds conditioning without letting form fall apart.
When power is the goal, use short sets and longer rests so each rep stays explosive. When conditioning is the goal, reduce rest and keep the load moderate. Mixing both styles across the week gives a strong balance of strength and work capacity.
For most full‑body drills, 3–6 rounds with quality reps works well. Track either time, distance, or total reps to measure progress. If technique slips, shorten the set rather than grinding through bad reps.
Pay attention to breathing and pacing. A steady exhale on effort helps maintain trunk stability. For loaded carries or sled work, keep the shoulders down and the spine long to avoid accumulating tension in the neck.
Pair Sled Pull with a strength lift earlier in the session and use it as a finisher, or place it in a conditioning block on separate days. Progress gradually by adding distance, time, or one extra round before increasing load.
Safety comes from consistency: keep the same setup each session and film a few reps to check form. Small improvements in posture and rhythm add up quickly in full‑body work.
For conditioning days, keep the loads light enough to move fast but heavy enough to keep technique honest. If speed drops, shorten the set or extend rest.
For power days, treat each rep like a sprint. Focus on quality and stop the set when the reps slow down. This protects joints and keeps the training effect specific.
Keep the core braced and the lats engaged during carries or sled work. This keeps the spine stable and reduces unwanted sway in the torso.
A simple progression is to add one short interval per week, then add load only when the same work feels easy. This prevents the technique from degrading under fatigue.
Programming & Progression
Build sessions around quality rounds. For conditioning, use 20–40 seconds of work with equal rest and keep the load moderate. For power, use 3–6 reps with full rest and stop before speed drops.
Place Sled Pull after the main strength lift if it’s a finisher, or make it the core of a separate conditioning day. This keeps technique sharp and fatigue predictable.
Progress by adding one short round or a small distance before increasing load. This keeps form clean and prevents conditioning work from turning into sloppy grinding.
Keep every rep crisp and identical. When your speed drops, end the set and rest; that’s how you keep power and conditioning progressing together.
Keep the rep quality high by ending sets early if speed drops. Consistent, crisp reps create better conditioning than grinding through fatigue.
Keep transitions smooth and deliberate. The best conditioning sessions look controlled, not rushed.
Pro Tips
Use a Harness
Keeps hands free and posture cleaner.
Alternate Directions
Backward pulls hit quads.
Time the Sets
20–60 seconds works well.
Great for Warm-Ups
Low impact and joint-friendly.
Variations
Backward Sled Pull
Quad emphasis.
Forward Harness Pull
Posterior-chain drive.
Hand-Over-Hand Pull
Upper-back and arms.
Interval Sled Pulls
Conditioning focus.
Alternatives
Track Your Sled Pull Progress
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