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← Calisthenics
Archer Row

Archer Row

The archer row is where you start building one-arm pulling strength. You set up just like a regular row on rings or a bar, but as you pull you extend one arm straight out to the side along the bar (like drawing a bow — hence "archer") and do most of the pulling work with the other arm. The extended arm contributes a little balance and grip, but the working arm is carrying the vast majority of the load.

This exercise is the last common stop before true one-arm work and front-lever progressions. It also bulletproofs your shoulders against left/right imbalances that two-arm exercises tend to hide.

How to do it

Set up under a pair of rings (ideal) or a bar that lets you spread your hands wide. Grip with your hands out wide and your body in a rigid, horizontal line. Pull to one side: bend one elbow and drive it back past your ribs while the other arm stays long and extended out to the side. Your chest should end up near the working hand. Lower under control and alternate, or finish all reps on one side first.

Target

3 sets of 8 reps per side with full range of motion.

Key tips

  • The straight arm provides balance, not pulling force — resist the urge to pull with it
  • Pull your working elbow back toward your hip, not up toward the ceiling
  • Keep your body rigid — no twisting or hiking a hip to help
  • Start with a higher bar/ring angle if 8 reps per side is too hard

Progression

Before this: own 3×8 Feet-Elevated Rows first. Your two-arm pulling should be very comfortable before you start offloading to one arm.

Next step: once 3×8 per side is clean, start hinting at front-lever strength with the Tuck Front Lever Row in Level 5.

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