Tom,
The Seguto swing was in full form the past Sunday at Pebble Beach. Kevin Mitchell teed off on hole 1 with a 4 iron and CBS positioned a camera angled 45 degrees to his swing. As Jim Nance was talking about his powerful swing, video captured the forward tilt and shoulder down. As he delivered the clubhead you could clearly see the “openness” of his backside on the way down while his head remained stable through impact. This camera angle allowed the viewer to see your teaching method applied real time at the PGA level. You would have been proud! Oh, BTW, he crisped a 250 yard shot right down the middle, just saying ; )
Hello all. The swaying & shifting is a big issue for me. As much as I try to stay centered, head over the ball during my back swing I do move of center. Try just to move the shoulders and stay centered does help. At the same time trying to incorporate the downswing with the unhinged of the wrist at the right time/position so as not to cast or open up to soon. Then on top of that my follow through as the chicken wing affect. I do the 2.8 drill perfectly. The full swing with the unhinged wrist and hips is a challenge. I have in my opinion got good at seeing what I am doing wrong but correcting the wrong is work in progress. I do like golf, I try to play the game when on the course and stay away from trying to fix everything and enjoy the day. The weather is nice here in the south no snow so no reason to complain. Enjoy your day. Thx for the forum it helps to read and learn.
Thanks for the swing system shout out and Tour validation, @James R Rogers! Of course, you're "preaching to the choir" here! 😎
Stack and Tilt is a golf swing system based on data from the game’s best golf ball strikers. So, with regard Tour players using 100% of it, 99% of it, 97% of it, or 78% of it, it doesn't really matter because they're ALL doing it to some extent. Every Tour player tilts, turns, and extends. They couldn't otherwise crisp a 250-yard 4 iron!!
Tom
Understanding S&T now, I see it in many pro swings. I think the pros use the power accumulators much more frequently and more effectively than I am able to do. But they work on their swing and their fitness and flexibility more than I do. The other difference I see is some of them seem to pressure more into the trail leg during the back swing. Yet they remain centered. Maybe @Tom Saguto can do a Member’s Tip on this some time. Not sure it is something we should consider, and that may be a good idea to explain why we don’t want to go down that rabbit hole.