6
7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 1/6 The New Tour Swing How it works We love it when a tour player comes up to us and says, "Hey, you're working with so-and-so. I saw him on the range doing this," and he mimics a backswing with the spine tilting way left. We love it because that's exactly what a good backswing should feel like. The swing we teach looks different because the body never moves off the ball?we call it the Stack & Tilt Swing. Keeping your weight on your front foot is the simplest way to control where the club hits the ground, which is the first fundamental of hitting the ball. Golfers who shift to the right on the backswing have to make precisely the same shift back to the left by impact. That complicated maneuver is the biggest source of frustration in the game today. Let's go through our swing with Aaron, who has been stacked since last year. We isolate a feel at each position, then compare our swing to the conventional method. You'll see why Stack & Tilt is right for you. Setup Página 1 de 6 Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com 12/10/2007 http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/2007/06/stackandtilt1_gd0706?printable=true

The New Tour Swing - How It Works

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The New Tour Swing - How It Works

7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 1/6

The New Tour Swing

How it works

We love it when a tour player comes up to us and says, "Hey, you're working

with so-and-so. I saw him on the range doing this," and he mimics a

backswing with the spine tilting way left. We love it because that's exactly

what a good backswing should feel like.

The swing we teach looks different because the body never moves off the

ball?we call it the Stack & Tilt Swing. Keeping your weight on your front foot

is the simplest way to control where the club hits the ground, which is the

first fundamental of hitting the ball. Golfers who shift to the right on the

backswing have to make precisely the same shift back to the left by impact.

That complicated maneuver is the biggest source of frustration in the game

today.

Let's go through our swing with Aaron, who has been stacked since last year.

We isolate a feel at each position, then compare our swing to theconventional method. You'll see why Stack & Tilt is right for you.

Setup

Página 1 de 6Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com

12/10/2007http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/2007/06/stackandtilt1_gd0706?printable=true

Page 2: The New Tour Swing - How It Works

7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 2/6

Centers over the ball

Picture two points, one midway between the shoulders and one midway between the hips. These are the swing

centers, and they should be stacked, setting the spine vertical. The grip is neutral, the weight 60-40 on the frontfoot.

Here Aaron is hitting a 5-iron, so his ball position is just ahead of the middle of his stance, directly below the

centers. This over-the-ball posture pre-sets a rotary swing with no shift to the back foot.

Halfway Back

Hands move inward

The spine tilts toward the ball at address, and when the player swings back, that tilt moves to the right. So to keep

the spine over the ball, which is the goal, the player has to tilt to the left during the backswing. The first movegoing back is this tilting action. It causes the shoulders and hips to turn on a steep downward angle, the right leg

straightening and the left knee flexing forward.

As the left shoulder turns down, pointing almost to the ball, the hands move on a circular arc around the body, not

up and away, and the arms stay on the rib cage. When the left arm reaches parallel to the ground, it should beangled 40 degrees inside the stance line. To golfers who've been told to swing back along the target line, this will

feel way too far inside.

WHAT IT FEELS LIKE

The hips are level at address, but because the spine tilts toward the target going back, the right hip turns much

higher than the left. It should feel as if the right hip is moving up and behind the body.

Página 2 de 6Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com

12/10/2007http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/2007/06/stackandtilt1_gd0706?printable=true

Page 3: The New Tour Swing - How It Works

7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 3/6

 

At the Top

Body stays centered

The spine should be vertical at the top, which makes the player feel tipped over the front leg. This tilting towardthe target happens continuously during the backswing. At the top, the weight on the front foot has increased

slightly.

The upper body is now full of torque but remains straight up and down—picture the twisted double helix of DNA

from high school biology. Here Aaron is tilted a few degrees to his left, which is the feeling a player should get.The arms stay low and inside, because they're moved by the rotary motion of the body; no lifting off the rib cage.

The head stays in place, so the ball remains centered in the player's vision. If the head shifts, it has the sameeffect as the ball moving and inhibits solid contact.

WHAT IT FEELS LIKE

Imagine you're making a left-handed follow-through. Grip the club like a lefty and swing through, feeling how theright side stretches and the spine tilts back. Then take your normal grip and feel that same stretch on a right-handed backswing.

Página 3 de 6Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com

12/10/2007http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/2007/06/stackandtilt1_gd0706?printable=true

Page 4: The New Tour Swing - How It Works

7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 4/6

 

Halfway Down

Weight moves left

The entire body starts the downswing together. More weight immediately moves to the left foot, with a distinctleaning into the left knee. Remember, the priority is to get the swing centers in front of the ball at impact. The hipsstart to turn back to level, and the legs reverse roles, the left leg straightening and the right leg flexing.

The turning body is supplying the initial acceleration, so the player must maximize rotational speed. The hips have

limited turning capacity when they're tilted, so they have to come out of their tilt to keep accelerating. The movethat releases the hips is a springing up of the lower body, where the butt muscles push the hips upward andtoward the target. The player has to feel as if he's jumping up as the club comes down.

WHAT IT FEELS LIKE

As you start down, imagine you're crushing a soda can under your left foot. The body has stayed centered on thebackswing, so there's no need to shift back to the ball. This downward pressure on the left foot sets up the

upward thrust of the hips through impact.

Página 4 de 6Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com

12/10/2007http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/2007/06/stackandtilt1_gd0706?printable=true

Page 5: The New Tour Swing - How It Works

7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 5/6

Impact

Lower body springs up

The upward thrust of the lower body that releases the hips—notice here the leg and butt muscles pushingforward—also helps deliver the club to the ball. Because the body is leaning on the front side, the club comes

down steeply and will crash into the ground unless the swing shallows out. The pelvic thrust takes some of the

steepness out of the swing.

The upper arms stay on the rib cage, and the hand path comes from well inside. The pelvic thrust allows the hipsto keep turning, which keeps the clubface closing at a constant rate and the hands swinging on a circular arc. The

club releases without any conscious hand or arm action. At impact, the swing centers are in front of the ball, sothe club catches the ball first then cuts a divot.

WHAT IT FEELS LIKE

Football kickers know they get more power if they swing their leg on an arc. Angular momentum (arc) beats linearforce (straight line) for distance. Same goes here: The hands swing fastest when they approach from the inside.

Finish

Torso flexes forward

With the hips released toward the target, the torso flexes forward and the butt tucks under the back. Notice thespine tilts away from the target for the first time. The belt is level and several inches higher than it was at address.

As the torso stretches, the arms can extend and the hands don't drop over the left shoulder. The hips andshoulders have continued to turn toward the target. As the club re-cocks, forming a 90-degree angle with the

forearms, the speed of the through-swing is absorbed. The hands are still swinging on a circular arc, because thebody has kept up its speed. The so-called release is the body releasing from its forward tilt, not some

manipulation by the hands and arms.

WHAT IT FEELS LIKE

Ever notice the swing on the PGA Tour logo? That's the follow-through we teach: torso flexed forward, spine tilted

Página 5 de 6Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com

12/10/2007http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/2007/06/stackandtilt1_gd0706?printable=true

Page 6: The New Tour Swing - How It Works

7/27/2019 The New Tour Swing - How It Works

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-new-tour-swing-how-it-works 6/6

back, arms extended. Forget about finishing with everything over your front leg, as many teachers say today.

Página 6 de 6Stack and Tilt: The New Tour Swing: Instruction: golfdigest.com