WOOO seems like a cool guy...never got the impression he was prone to exaggeration, so going by the lifts he posted.. What would be the point anyway. Really very few others I can say that about on GB. Flights of delusion are extremely common on GB, based on false ego and/or wanting to be noticed. Lonely people come here daily (actually never seem to leave, but for a couple of hours). And other guy's just angry most of the time.
700lb DL, not that uncommon, but still impressive. Depending on the ratio of bwt to the weight lifted, can be even more impressive. 400lb bench, getting fairly common, with the new watermark being 500 in most lifting circles. That's what is the new goal or standard of achievement. Of course these are instinctive strongmen, training with strongmen goals. Who just have the passion for lifting very heavy weight.....some are juiced, some not. 100+ years ago the old timers were lifting ungodly amounts of weight...no juice back then. Maybe except for lots of meat and beer, it that could count as "juice".
Majority of heavy DL'ers break the lift into 3 phases in training. Watched a few Olympic lifters, not actually
doing any DL'ing in training, DL 700 + fairly well. Those 400-500 rep cleans from the floor help quite a bit.
Looks like Yez33 has a natural pull and a not so natural push...hence the lower bench press but the higher chinning strength. Which means a goal of 400 can be that much more of a challenge. The average experienced BB'er/trainee, after years in the gym, usually will max out around 320 to 350 in the bench. Which is very good actually.
Don't know what Yez33's workout protocols are, and he might have done this type of training before, but might suggest suggest partial rep lockouts and middle range. Along with working the weakest point of the bench, the starting point off the chest...also using partial reps. Might also suggest to never go to a point of failure in any training session. Leave 1 or 2 reps short of failure. Yez33 can take all this for what's it's worth.
Good to set goals, but probably best for setting little progressive goals. If wanting to bench (for example) 300 and are currently doing 205, set your goal at 215 and work towards that end. When hitting 215, with 3 to 5 reps (and you will) set the next goal at 225, etc, etc, etc. Upward and onward..as it were.
Good luck