How I Went From 4 to 11 Pull-Ups in 10 Weeks (top 2 drills inside)


Back in 2011, during my Level II RKC, there was a pull-up requirement that humbled many strong people.

You had to perform a strict tactical pull-up:

— Start from a complete dead hang
— Thumbless grip
— No kicking, no swing
— Chest or neck to the bar
— Full controlled lower

Additionally, it had to be weighted.

— If you weighed under 220 lbs → 53 lb kettlebell
— If you weighed over 220 lbs → 35 lb kettlebell
— Hanging from your foot.

At the time, I was around 240 lbs.

Now. I was a former college and NFL offensive lineman. I’d spent years being strong, powerful, and hard to move.

But pull-ups? They were never my thing.

Even years after dropping 50–60 lbs post-NFL, I could only manage about 4 clean pull-ups when I started preparing for that cert.

So I had a very specific goal:

– Get strong enough to pass the weighted pull-up
– And get my bodyweight pull-ups up into double digits

What worked wasn’t grinding max reps or testing myself every week.

It followed a structured progression—very similar to what I now outline in my 0 to 20 Pull-Up Program—and layered in the right accessory drills at the right time.

Over about 10 weeks, I went from 4 pull-ups to 11 clean reps, and hit the required weighted pull-up.

Two drills in particular made a big difference once I could do a few solid reps.

Drill #1: Top-position push-away negatives

You start at the top of the pull-up (use a box or bench if needed), squeeze your back hard, touch chest or neck to the bar, then actively push yourself away from the bar and slowly control the descent.

Drill #2: Scapular pull-ups with a lean-back

From a dead hang, you pull your shoulders down and back without bending your elbows. Then you lean back slightly and push yourself “down” using your lats while looking toward the ceiling.

I didn’t replace my pull-up training with these.
I used them alongside it.

Now beginners need things like assisted vertical pulls, band-assisted reps, ring work, and negatives. But once you’re at 3–5 clean pull-ups, these drills train the stabilizers, clean up your mechanics, and help you progress without wrecking your elbows.

That exact structure is built into my 0 to 20 Pull-Up Program.

And right now, it’s bundled with:

– Bodyweight Beast 1.0
– Bodyweight Beast 2.0
– The 14-Day Steel Mace Challenge

All at a special, limited-time price.

This is the last call I’m sending for this bundle.

If you’ve been stuck at the same pull-up number for years—or want a smarter way to build them—this is the system:

–> 0-20 Pull Up Plan + Bodyweight Beast + 14-day Steel Mace Challenge

– Forest

PS – Even if you don’t grab the program, once you can do a few clean pull-ups, start incorporating those two drills. They’re a big reason I finally broke past my own plateau.


Forest Vance Training, Inc.

We specialize in kettlebells for fat loss in individuals aged 40 and up. Serving Lee’s Summit, MO and Offering Online Training Worldwide

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