@averea1352Absolutely. Steve Elkington preset his hips and even straightened his trail leg in his setup when he was learning S&T...and he even played tour events doing that!
A follow up to your section on limited mobility... can you apply that set up (60/40 and pre setting your right hip with all of your clubs? I like that advice... good job Tom for taking care of the our generation!
@averea1352 - LOL!! Even if that math doesn't quite work for you, it's still going to be considerably more turn than you will get by trying to torque yourself against a "firm trail side" as the mainstream would suggest (and a lot less painful as well)!
@averea1352 - You definitely do not need to tilt 90 degrees!! Have a look at the excerpt below from the Stack and Tilt book - specifically position #3. That's all the tilt you need.
The S&T setup - with the feet and knees flared outward - facilitates an effortless 45-degree hip turn. All you then need is another 45 degrees of shoulder turn to get to a full 90!
@averea1352Absolutely. Steve Elkington preset his hips and even straightened his trail leg in his setup when he was learning S&T...and he even played tour events doing that!
A follow up to your section on limited mobility... can you apply that set up (60/40 and pre setting your right hip with all of your clubs? I like that advice... good job Tom for taking care of the our generation!
I get it 45 + 45 = 90. Of course at your age that math computation is easier to achieve!... lol
@averea1352 - You definitely do not need to tilt 90 degrees!! Have a look at the excerpt below from the Stack and Tilt book - specifically position #3. That's all the tilt you need.
The S&T setup - with the feet and knees flared outward - facilitates an effortless 45-degree hip turn. All you then need is another 45 degrees of shoulder turn to get to a full 90!