Meadows Row Mistakes to Avoid
Standing too parallel to the bar — the perpendicular stance is what makes this a Meadows row. Your body should be at roughly 90° to the barbell.
Using a narrow grip on the thin part — grip the fat end (sleeve) for the proper angle and the grip challenge that John Meadows intended.
Not hinging enough — get your torso low, nearly parallel to the floor. Too upright reduces the lat stretch.
Neglecting the stretch — the bottom position where the lat is fully lengthened is where the magic happens. Don't cut it short.
Meadows Row Muscles Worked
The Meadows row targets the lats from a unique lateral angle that standard rows don't replicate. The perpendicular stance and overhand thick-bar grip also heavily tax the rear deltoids, forearms, and grip strength.
Meadows Row FAQ
Who is the Meadows row named after?
John Meadows (1972-2021), an IFBB pro bodybuilder and coach known as 'Mountain Dog.' He popularized this variation as part of his training methodology for back development.
What makes the Meadows row different from a regular row?
The perpendicular stance creates a unique diagonal pulling angle that stretches and contracts the lat differently. The thick bar grip (grabbing the sleeve) also adds a forearm challenge absent from standard rows.
Can I do Meadows rows without a landmine?
Yes — wedge a barbell into a corner with a towel. The setup is identical to any landmine exercise.
How heavy for Meadows rows?
Moderate — this is a feel exercise, not a max-out movement. One or two plates on the bar is typical. Focus on the stretch-contraction and the squeeze.