FST-7
BACK
FST-7 Back Philosophy
The back is the largest and most complex muscle group in the body — spanning the latissimus dorsi, mid and lower trapezius, rhomboids, teres major, rear deltoids, erector spinae, and more. FST-7 back training demands both maximum mechanical tension (heavy compound rowing and pulling) and metabolic pump work to flood the deep fascial layers. The unique challenge: the back is difficult to "feel" — building a strong mind-muscle connection here is just as important as the weight on the bar. This session is structured to develop width, thickness, and depth across every region of the posterior chain.
Warm-Up Sequence — Back Day Priority
Cat-Cow × 15 reps: On hands and knees, alternate between arching the spine toward the ceiling and dropping the belly to the floor. This mobilizes every spinal segment before any load is applied — critical on back day when the erectors and thoracic spine are about to face heavy rowing.
Band Pull-Aparts × 3×20: Pre-activates the rear delts, rhomboids, and lower traps — muscles that must fire correctly during all rowing movements. Use a light resistance band, pull to chest height, hold 1 sec at full stretch.
Dead Hang × 3×30 sec: Hang from a pull-up bar with a relaxed grip and let the spine decompress naturally. This also stretches the lats in their lengthened position and primes the shoulder girdle for pulling work. You will feel the lat stretch intensify as you relax.
Scapular Pull-Ups × 2×10: Hang from pull-up bar with straight arms. Without bending the elbows, depress and retract the scapulae — rising a few inches. This isolated scapular depression is the first motion in every lat pulldown and pull-up. Learning to fire this independently is the #1 technique cue for better back training.
Light Cable Row × 2×15 (very light): Using 30–40% of working weight. Focus entirely on initiating the row by driving the elbow back — not pulling with the bicep. Feel the mid-back muscles squeeze at full contraction. This neural priming dramatically improves muscle recruitment on all subsequent exercises.
Why Pull-Ups First
Pull-ups are the king of lat width development. Starting the session here — when the CNS is fresh and strength output is highest — allows maximum overloading of the lats through full range of motion. The weighted variation ensures progressive tension overload, the primary driver of hypertrophy. Use a dip belt with added plates. If you cannot perform weighted pull-ups for 5 reps, use bodyweight only or an assisted machine until you can.
Execution — The Two Critical Cues
Cue 1 — Initiate with scapular depression: Before bending the elbows, actively pull your shoulder blades DOWN and BACK. This engages the lats first, rather than letting the biceps take over. Most people skip this step entirely.
Cue 2 — Drive elbows to hips, not just down: As you pull, imagine driving your elbows toward your rear hip pockets. This cues the lats into full contraction far more effectively than thinking "pull yourself up." At the top, your chest should be near the bar. Lower for a full 3-count, getting a complete lat stretch at the bottom — do not skip the stretch.
Pyramid Loading
Warm-up: 2 sets of bodyweight pull-ups × 8–10 reps before adding weight. Working sets: add 10–25 lbs (or more) depending on strength level. On the final set, remove the weight belt and immediately perform as many bodyweight reps as possible — this strip/drop technique extends the set past weighted failure for maximum fiber recruitment.
Pulldown After Pull-Ups: The Rationale
After weighted pull-ups, the lats are partially fatigued but still capable of high-volume work. The pulldown allows you to control the exact weight and rep range, accumulating volume without grip or stabilizer failure limiting the set. Lean back slightly — about 15–20° — which places the lat fibers in a more optimal pulling angle. Pull the bar to the top of the chest/collarbone, not the chin. Your elbows should finish pointing at the floor and slightly behind the torso at the bottom of each rep.
The Stretch-and-Squeeze Protocol
At the top of every rep, allow the arms to fully extend and the shoulder blades to slightly protract — this is the full lat stretch. Feel the muscle lengthen actively. Then initiate the pull by retracting the scapulae FIRST (0.5 sec pause at top), then drive the elbows down. At the bottom, hold the contracted position for 1 full second on every rep, squeezing the lats hard with the bar at chest level. This TUT (time-under-tension) approach dramatically improves hypertrophic output vs just moving weight.
Form Fundamentals — Where Most Go Wrong
Hinge at the hips until the torso is approximately 45° from the floor (not upright — that becomes a shrug). Maintain a neutral spine throughout — no rounding of the lower back under any circumstances. The bar should hang at mid-shin. Drive the elbows upward and back, pulling the bar to the lower abdomen/upper hip (not the chest — chest-rowing overloads the biceps). Hold the top contracted position for 1 second on every rep. Lower for 3 full seconds until arms are straight. Never jerk the weight or use momentum.
Overhand vs Underhand Grip
Overhand (pronated) grip targets the upper/mid back and rear delts more heavily. Underhand (supinated) grip increases bicep involvement and allows a slightly larger ROM. Use overhand for this exercise to maximize pure back development. If grip is a limiting factor, use straps on the final 2 sets — your back should fail before your hands.
⚠ Spinal Safety
Never row with a rounded lower back. If you cannot maintain a neutral spine at a given weight, reduce load immediately. The erector spinae are under isometric load throughout — one rep with a rounded lumbar spine under heavy load can cause serious injury. Use a lifting belt on max effort sets.
Unilateral Advantage — Why This Follows the Barbell Row
The bilateral barbell row requires both sides to share the load — dominant sides often compensate. The single-arm DB row eliminates this by isolating each side independently, correcting strength and size imbalances. The supported position (knee and hand on bench) also removes spinal stress, allowing the back muscles to be trained harder without erector fatigue becoming the limiting factor. Use a heavy dumbbell — this is not a light isolation exercise.
The "Row to the Hip" Technique
Most people row the dumbbell to their armpit — this overloads the rear delt and bicep. Instead, drive the elbow straight back and past the hip, finishing with the dumbbell beside the hip bone. This full-range motion maximally contracts the lat in its shortened position. At the bottom, let the dumbbell travel until the arm is fully straight and the shoulder blade protracts forward — this is the full lat stretch. Hold 3 seconds at the bottom on the eccentric. This slow eccentric dramatically increases muscle damage and subsequent growth signal.
Execution: Chest Up, Elbows In
Sit tall with feet on the footpad and a neutral spine. As you row, keep elbows tucked close to the body (not flared out) — this shifts emphasis from the rear delt to the mid-back and lower lats. At full contraction, squeeze the scapulae together hard for 2 full seconds — this extended isometric hold is where mid-back development really happens. On the return, allow a full forward lean of the torso to get maximum lat stretch at the end range. Do not round the lower back — the forward lean should come from the hip hinge, not spinal flexion.
Drop Set on Final Set
On the 3rd set, perform 12–15 reps to failure. Immediately drop weight by 30% and continue for 10 more reps. Drop again by 30% and finish with 10 more reps at the lightest weight, focusing entirely on squeezing the mid-back at peak contraction. This triple drop set floods the mid-back musculature with blood and sets up the FST-7 finisher perfectly.
The Pure Lat Isolator
Stand at a high cable pulley with a straight bar or rope. Keep arms almost straight (10° soft elbow bend). Hinge forward slightly. With the arms remaining straight, drive the bar downward in an arc until it reaches your thighs — this motion isolates the lat almost completely by removing bicep and rear delt contribution. This exercise is 100% about the lat squeeze — use light enough weight to hold the peak contracted position for 2 full seconds on every single rep.
The Stretch Phase — Where the Magic Happens
Allow the bar to rise fully overhead at the top — feeling the lats fully lengthened and stretched. This stretch-to-contraction arc is unmatched for developing mind-muscle connection in the lats, particularly for athletes who struggle to "feel" their back during compound movements. Performing this exercise before the FST-7 finisher dramatically improves lat activation during the cable row finisher.
Why the Cable Pullover for Back FST-7
The cable pullover is the ideal FST-7 back exercise for three reasons: (1) It provides constant tension throughout the full arc — a dumbbell pullover loses tension significantly at the contracted position, the cable does not. (2) The overhead stretched position places the lat fascia under maximum distension — the starting position is essentially a lat stretch under load. (3) It is a pure lat exercise with minimal bicep involvement, meaning the back musculature is doing all the work for all 7 sets. After 6 prior exercises, this will be brutally effective at forcing a deep, extreme pump across the entire lat structure.
The FST-7 Back Execution Protocol
Attach a rope to the high pulley. Face the cable stack, take 1–2 steps back. Feet shoulder-width, slight forward hip hinge. Select a moderate weight — approximately 50–60% of your max for straight-arm pulldowns. After 6 prior exercises, this will create an extreme pump at the correct weight.
Start with arms raised above head, letting the rope pull them fully overhead — feel the complete lat stretch in this position. Hold 1 second. Then, with straight arms (soft elbow), drive the rope downward in a wide arc until hands reach the thighs. Squeeze the lats HARD at the bottom and hold for 2 full seconds every rep. Return slowly over 3 seconds.
After each set, rest 30–45 seconds strictly. During rest, perform the FST-7 lat stretch: grab the cable upright with one hand at chest height, step sideways and lean away, bending at the waist — pulling the lat into a deep side-bend stretch. Hold 15–20 seconds per side. You will feel the pumped lat being stretched — this is exactly the stimulus required to expand the fascial compartment.
Continue for all 7 sets without extending rest periods. By sets 5–7, the lat pump will be extraordinary — this is working as intended. If the pump becomes so intense that ROM is compromised, reduce weight by 10–15% and continue. Volume and stretch matter more than load in FST-7.
After the final 7th set, immediately perform a 60-second dead hang from the pull-up bar — both hands, arms fully extended, body relaxed. This is the single most effective lat fascial stretch you can perform. Then consume your post-workout nutrition within 15 minutes to flood the expanded fascial compartment with amino acids and glucose.
Intra-Set Stretching Protocol (Between Every Set)
Side-Bend Lat Stretch (Primary): Grip cable upright or rack at chest height, step to the side, lean away with torso. 15–20 sec each side. The most effective lat stretch available.
Dead Hang: If a bar is immediately available, a 15-second dead hang between sets dramatically accelerates fascial expansion. The lat is loaded in the fully lengthened position while engorged with blood.
Overhead Reach Stretch: Interlace fingers, push arms overhead and lean to each side — 10 sec per side. Good secondary option when bar is not accessible between sets.
Child's Pose Reach: If floor space allows — kneel, sit back toward heels, reach both arms forward. Hold 15 sec. The most thorough lat and thoracolumbar fascia stretch available. Ideally performed after the final set.
Session Summary
Back Muscle Coverage
All major back regions are hit. Lats (width) receive the most volume via pull-ups, pulldowns, and FST-7. Mid-traps and rhomboids (thickness) via barbell and cable rowing. Erectors are isometrically loaded throughout all horizontal pulling. Teres major and rear delts receive strong secondary stimulus.
FST-7 Back Principles
Width Before Thickness
Vertical pulling (pull-ups, pulldowns) comes before horizontal rowing to prioritize lat width while the CNS is freshest.
Mind-Muscle is Non-Negotiable
The back is the hardest muscle group to feel. Every set must have intentional scapular control — not just moving weight.
Protect the Spine
Never compromise lumbar integrity for load. Use a belt on max effort rows. Stop and reduce weight if form degrades.
Dead Hang Between FST-7 Sets
The dead hang is the single most effective lat fascial stretch — use it between every FST-7 set if possible.
Use Straps Strategically
Grip failure should never be the limiting factor on back exercises. Use straps from set 3 onward on all heavy rows and pulls.
Nutrition Timing
50–70g complex carbs (oats, sweet potato, white rice), 40–50g lean protein (chicken, turkey, egg whites). Back day is your highest volume session — fuel accordingly. Larger carb intake than other muscle groups.
30–50g fast carbs (cluster dextrin, Gatorade, banana), EAAs or BCAAs. Begin consuming from the first set — the high volume and intensity of this session depletes glycogen faster than any other muscle group day.
50–60g whey isolate + 70–90g high-glycemic carbs (white rice, Cream of Rice, dextrose). Back day demands the largest post-workout meal — the posterior chain has been taxed across the entire session. This is the single most important nutrition window of the week.
Post-Session Stretching
Dead Hang (2 min total)
The gold standard lat and spinal decompression stretch. Do 4 × 30 sec holds post-session. Most important stretch of the entire session.
Side-Bend Lat Stretch
Grip rack or doorframe at shoulder height, lean away into lateral flexion. 45 sec per side. Deeply stretches the lateral lat fascia.
Child's Pose with Reach
Kneel, sit back on heels, extend arms forward on the floor. 60 sec. Simultaneously stretches lats, thoracolumbar fascia, and thoracic spine.
Foam Roll Thoracic Spine
Place roller at mid-back, extend over it segment by segment. 60 sec total. Restores thoracic extension after heavy rowing.
Thread-the-Needle Thoracic Rotation
On hands and knees, thread one arm under the body until shoulder touches the floor. 30 sec per side. Releases thoracic rotational restriction from unilateral rowing.
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Disclaimer: The information provided in this discussion is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or professional advice. Only a qualified health professional can determine what practices are suitable for your individual needs and abilities.
