Why You Really Want a Stack and Tilt Golf Swing
Stack & Tilt
Are you completely happy with your golf or do you get frustrated because you wish your drives could be longer, straighter and generally more consistent. What would you give to finally send those really bad shots packing. The good news is that it just might be possible after all. Have you heard of Stack and Tilt? Probably. But do you actually know what it’s all about? I heard about it a year or so ago but it’s taken me until very recently to find out what all the fuss and let me tell you the hype is justified. In case you haven’t heard of it, and it is going down a storm with tour professionals, it is a nbrand new kind of swing.
The Stack and Tilt golf swing was developed by Andy Plummer and Mike Bennett - otherwise known in the business as ‘The Golf Swing Whisperers’. The research to develop this swing took twenty long years - but it was worth waiting for. What’s astonishing is that the theory is more or less the opposite to what you and most golfers have been taught about how to swing a club.Although the
Stack and Tilt Golf Swing maintains some of the basic principals, there is one fundamental difference which sets it apart from ‘normal’ golf swings- it doesn’t involve the golfer shifting his or her weight to the back foot. Instead you keep your weight over the ball and in doing so keep much of the control you lose in a traditional swing as your front foot maintains all the weight on it, thereby massively improving your swing.
The main benefit of the stack and tilt method is the huge improvement to consistency. Even though the execution of the swing is very simple you will see your ball go further and straighter than with any other swing method - it’s incredible stuff!
If you would like to get a bit of Stack and Tilt into your game then why not try the Stack & Tilt Golf Swing Dvds risk-free for 60 days. That’s more than enough time to see your handicap come tumbling down! And those wasted shots could soon be a thing of the past.
This entry was posted on 12. May 2009 at 04:44 and is filed under Swing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site.