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Butt Kick With Row
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HomeBack › Butt Kick With Row
Butt Kick With Row
Back Bodyweight Pull Cardio
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Set up the equipment correctly and adjust seat or handles to your height.
2
Start at a moderate pace to warm up for the first 1-2 minutes.
3
Maintain an upright posture with core engaged throughout.
4
Drive with both arms and legs for maximum calorie burn.
5
Control your breathing — exhale on exertion and find a steady rhythm.
Pro Tips
Interval training — alternating between high and low intensity — burns more fat than steady-state.
Keep your core engaged to improve posture and protect your lower back.
Track your heart rate to make sure you're training in the right zone for your goal.
Overview

A cardiovascular exercise using the no equipment that raises heart rate and burns calories. Works the full body through continuous rhythmic movement, making it effective for conditioning and fat loss.

Muscles Worked
Calisthenics-Cardio-Functional
75%
Full Body
42%
Common Mistakes
Starting at maximum intensity with no warm-up — increases injury risk.
Poor posture — slouching forward or gripping too tight reduces efficiency.
Inconsistent pace — going too hard too soon and burning out early.
About Training Your Back

The back is the largest muscle group of the upper body and arguably the most important for posture, strength, and a powerful physique. It is not a single muscle but a layered system: the broad latissimus dorsi that creates width and the V-taper, the trapezius running from the neck to the mid-back, the rhomboids between the shoulder blades, the teres muscles, and the erector spinae that run along the spine and keep you upright.

Because these muscles pull in different directions, no single exercise trains the back completely. The most effective programmes combine two broad categories of movement. Vertical pulls — pull-ups, chin-ups, and lat pulldowns — emphasise the lats and build the width that makes a back look impressive from the front. Horizontal pulls — barbell rows, dumbbell rows, cable rows, and T-bar rows — build thickness through the mid-back, hitting the traps, rhomboids, and lats together. Hip-hinge movements such as the deadlift and rack pull load the entire posterior chain and develop the spinal erectors that protect the lower back.

A well-rounded back session usually includes at least one vertical pull, one horizontal pull, and some direct work for the lower back or traps. Heavy rows and pulldowns respond well to moderate rep ranges around 6 to 10, while deadlifts are typically trained in lower ranges for strength. Because the back is large and recovers well, many lifters train it twice per week with good results.

The biggest technical challenge with back training is actually feeling the back work rather than letting the biceps and forearms take over. Initiate each pull by depressing and retracting the shoulder blades — think about driving your elbows down and back rather than curling the weight with your arms. Keep the chest up, avoid jerking with momentum, and pause briefly in the fully contracted position to maximise tension. On deadlifts and rows, maintain a neutral spine; rounding under heavy load is the most common cause of injury.

Strong back muscles do more than look good. They counterbalance all the pressing and sitting that dominate modern life, pulling the shoulders back into healthy alignment and reducing the slumped posture that leads to neck and shoulder pain. Building your back also directly improves performance on nearly every other lift. Explore the popular back exercises below to assemble a complete pulling routine.

Popular Back exercises:
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