Kroc Row Mistakes to Avoid
Going so heavy that every rep is pure momentum — some english is fine, but the back should still be the primary mover. If it's all body swing, lighten up.
Using straps — the whole point is building grip alongside back. No straps. When your grip fails, the set is over.
Low reps — Kroc rows are high-rep by definition (15-25+). If you can't get 15 reps, the dumbbell is too heavy for Kroc rows.
Doing these before your heavy compounds — Kroc rows crush your grip. Do them after deadlifts and barbell rows, not before.
Kroc Row Muscles Worked
The Kroc row hammers the lats, traps, and rhomboids with heavy loads, while the no-strap grip demand builds forearm and grip strength that transfers directly to deadlifts. The controlled body english allows overloading beyond what strict rows permit.
Kroc Row FAQ
What makes a Kroc row different from a regular dumbbell row?
Three things: heavier weight, higher reps (15-25+), and intentional body english. It's a controlled cheat row designed to overload the back and grip simultaneously.
How heavy should Kroc rows be?
Heavy enough that you can barely get 15-20 reps with some body english. For most intermediate lifters, this is 40-60kg dumbbells. Advanced lifters go 70kg+.
Are Kroc rows safe?
The controlled cheating is intentional, not sloppy. As long as your lower back stays neutral and you don't jerk the dumbbell, they're safe. They're also excellent for building the back resilience needed for heavy deadlifts.
When should I do Kroc rows in my program?
After your main compounds (deadlifts, barbell rows). Kroc rows are a finisher — they drain your grip and back. One set per side of 20+ reps at the end of back day is the classic prescription.