Looking forward to trying on the range. Same technique for irons? And, this is just a drill, right? On the course you wouldn't try to stop quickly, right? Thanks for a clearly demonstrated and described video!
Rob: just watched the video with Scottie, and your explanation, what I didn't understand was the swing hard stop fast, it's the stop fast I don't get. Can you explain why I should stop fast?
I have the same feet work as Scottie 😁 I only realised recently.Only problem is I don't turn that much and my hands is not that high.And my club is a bit behind the head. Still working on fixing this😅
There’s a difference between “moving all your weight back” and loading the rear leg in the backswing. Although Scotty stays centered, we know from Force Plate data that the best players in the world, without exception, shift a tremendous load into that trail leg on the backswing. As long as the weight stays inside the trail leg (I.e. Femur doesn’t travel over the ankle) you can put almost 100% of your weight into that leg, while staying centered because it’s a dynamic movement with rotation involved. I can’t stand these disingenuous misrepresentations of what people are advocating.
Great video and content Rob. Always been told to keep my weight on my right side at address with the driver. I have been struggling for a couple of years now with driver (push and weak drives to the right, no distance). Will give this 80/20 a try. Thank you Rob.
Great video. Thanks for the informative analysis! Constructive criticism though: fix that audio. Sounds like your microphone’s gain is too high and distorted.
Thanks Rob for the effort in making this video. I'm enjoying my golf more than ever thanks to you, your channel is the best. This video of Scotttie's swing was very helpful because I thought that I had to lean more back on setup with the driver, which didn't work so well for me. Seeing Scottie standing straighter makes me feel better and I will continue doing the same.
Went out with a set of MacGregor A703 century irons. I have a 22 handicap but my lower end of the bag is pretty pure most of the time. +8 around 9 holes is my best 9 so far. Thanks for the hit hard stop short drill rob
Great Vid! But need some clarification/detail. It is important to me for you to keep measuring the energy transfer from initial setup to transition to follow through: 80/20 at set up to 90/10 at top etc. Secondly, it looks like your hips are level (and maintain mostly level) through impact. It is your shoulders that are tilted down not hips so much! Is that right? When I get hips aren't level for me, I get too much tilt behind the ball and stub the club in the ground. Thank you for your hard work.
Beautiful swing from Scottie!! I recently filmed myself & the improvement this winter hitting foam balls inside has been astronomical! Than you Golftec guys in Singapore! Now I have to take that swing outside with my driver, which I can't swing inside lest I destroy the ceiling in my rec room.
Great videos on the latest tour winners. All have their unique quirks but most important is what recreational golfers can learn from these great players. Gives the channel a nice little variety and flavor of the week learning oportunity.
Great content Rob, keep up the good work. I’m searching for more info on the friend in Stuart Fl, 24/7 but cannot find anything. Could you provide some help about location.
Love your videos - got an idea for a concept that I've never seen addressed anywhere else... In Stack and Tilt there is a focus on weight forward and all the focus seems to be on this. But what about your weight as it relates to toes-heel in your left and right leg? Traditional golf says backswing = weight moves to left foot toe, right foot heel; downswing = weight moves to left foot heel, right foot toe. Since we're keeping so much weight forward, what is 'best practice' with S&T? Main reason I ask: I tend to not get my weight back on to left heel at impact and follow through - which then causes heel shots (and even shanks) as my weight is too far forward. But I'm struggling on the idea of what exactly I should be doing and any drills to fix this... Should I have my weight on left heel and it never leaves that?
Having troubles getting the hips forward. What muscles are you using ? Or what are you feeling to get forward? Are you pushing off the trail leg? Great video like always
Rob, this move is something I am working on with my Golftec coach. If I understand correctly you recommend a rotation of the pelvis, as a feel, to transition pressure as opposed to bumping the hip?
Does anyone notice how tall he is? Mr. Scheffler is 6'3'. Every golfer is different. I have long arms and short legs. If I use the same swing plane and hip thrust as Scottie the results would be catastrophic. Rob you are a great coach and Scottie is the hottest golfer in the last 20 years.
Thanks Rob. Can you recommend a S&T trainer in San Francisco North Bay Area, say around Sonoma, Petaluma or Santa Rosa area? Really enjoy your very professional videos.
Thanks for your channel. Very informative. Quick question on setup. Do you setup with weight balanced on the balls of your feet or is it more toward the heel?
I was trying your set-up (80-20) and I couldn't eliminate hitting behind the ball particularly with longer clubs during the down swing. When I look at Scottie's set-up at 0.29, it appears that he is 50-50. And at 2.02/3.02, based on his upper body tilt, his weight is more towards his right leg or behind the ball rather than at the left leg. I think this enables him to "swing thru the ball" with the driver.
Rob, Very helpful video. I had thought that the head position at the top of the backswing and at impact was supposed to be at the right of the body center, I mean further away back from the target. The reason being that I had thought that that head position would help to shallow both the shaft in the down swing and the angle of attack/impact. Now, I realize that wasn’t entirely correct. Best wishes,Thanks.
Great insight Rob! I just watched your driver series for P1-P8 & this video is a great companion piece. Can you go over what you are thinking, or not thinking, during the swing? I know I hyper focus on a few things which I think is affecting my swing, like hitting center of the face but I haven’t moved my lower body enough.
Rob, would comment on the amount of upper body extension at the top of Scottie's backswing? He appears to exhibit as much "wood chopping" motion as any Tour Pro I've seen on the backswing (on the follow-through as well). I'm sure it contributes to a huge shoulder turn and steady head, but doesn't there HAVE to be some influence on transition where you're borderline losing balance TOWARDS the target in a "drift" (a/k/a prop drill-like) move? Would love your thoughts. Thanks!
Personally, I find the focus on swing mechanics that follows the success of one golfer or another tiresome. Let's face it, winning is so much about putting, short game, competitive temperament and current level of confidence, yet every time someone goes on a streak his technique becomes the fad of the day. We see players come and go from that number one spot with all sort of variations in mechanics. Donald, Harrington, Westwood, McIlroy, Johnson, Koepka, Rahm, Speith, etc, etc, etc. It goes on and on. Then come the boomers who fade in and out of fashion. Scheffler will be no different. No one will care about his action as soon as his putting goes. Bottom line for improvement .... drop the obsession with golf swings and sharpen up your short game ..... unless your idea of "improvement" is how far not how many?
@@golftecasia That maybe so, but my point is why do coaches push the swings of whoever is playing well at the time? I wouldn't copy Westwood or Speith's "chicken wing", or Johnson's wrist just because they got to number one? And Sheffler's mechanics are pretty useless to a short golfer where Woosnam (also a former no. 1) is a far better role model. Then there's de Chambeau, an interesting person, but someone who is single-handedly ruining golf for those silly enough to copy him. Seems he's now injured. Personally I don't believe his version of how he got injured; that would undermine him. His driving range slugging sessions and apparent obsession with distance far more likely to be the reason he has two injuries. Just my opinions; been there and had a long life in the game seeing dozens of fads come and go along with the players ...
@@golftecasia A good role model for a taller man perhaps? If you have height you can crash into the ball from aloft but if not, you need to shift your weight in an athletic way and in place (with the golf swing) just like any thrower, racquet player, batsman, baseball hitter, pitcher, shot putter, etc, etc ; that's where I think this action misleads ... but I'm sure you've heard that criticism many times if you push Stack &Tilt?
Interesting I will give it a go Rob thankyou
Hi, forward we go.thank you sr
Excelente Master!!
Looking forward to trying on the range. Same technique for irons? And, this is just a drill, right? On the course you wouldn't try to stop quickly, right? Thanks for a clearly demonstrated and described video!
I'm very close to Stuart. I'm in Port St Lucie.
Great video Rob
Great info! Thank You!
Rob: just watched the video with Scottie, and your explanation, what I didn't understand was the swing hard stop fast, it's the stop fast I don't get. Can you explain why I should stop fast?
Good video, great channel
That’s the recipe right there!
The videos are great, keep them coming.
Guy Canada 🇨🇦
What is Scottie doing to close the club face? At left arm parallel on the downswing the club face is open.
Awesome 🏌️👍✌️
You’re so great! This is exactly what I needed to see and to hear. Thank you 😊
Hey man, I’m trying to get in touch with a stack and tilt coach for an in-person lesson. Any help?
I have the same feet work as Scottie 😁 I only realised recently.Only problem is I don't turn that much and my hands is not that high.And my club is a bit behind the head.
Still working on fixing this😅
Yes very good lesson & drill of the golf swing - looking forward to your next lesson- keith
Another great video with fantastic insight Rob. Thanks!
Excellent video. Keep ‘em coming please.
early extension for me causes ball go straight left, or compensate as the brain will do and slice right
There’s a difference between “moving all your weight back” and loading the rear leg in the backswing. Although Scotty stays centered, we know from Force Plate data that the best players in the world, without exception, shift a tremendous load into that trail leg on the backswing. As long as the weight stays inside the trail leg (I.e. Femur doesn’t travel over the ankle) you can put almost 100% of your weight into that leg, while staying centered because it’s a dynamic movement with rotation involved. I can’t stand these disingenuous misrepresentations of what people are advocating.
@@golftecasia no idea, please explain it to me.
Great video and content Rob.
Always been told to keep my weight on my right side at address with the driver.
I have been struggling for a couple of years now with driver (push and weak drives to the right, no distance).
Will give this 80/20 a try.
Thank you Rob.
Thank you for your reply.
Very interesting analysis of Scottie's swing. I like the idea of keeping your weight forward. Thanks.
nice, setup looks like Tom Weiskopf IMO....
Always appreciated and always something gained from your instruction. Thanks Rob
I see some players who have a big hip bump and some players who have very little hip bump.
Great video. Thanks for the informative analysis! Constructive criticism though: fix that audio. Sounds like your microphone’s gain is too high and distorted.
@@golftecasia ah… happens to the best of us :)
Great stuff as usual. I'm golfing tomorrow, so I'll put these tips to good use and "see how I get on"
"Holy Grail" hips. Good stuff sir.
Thanks Rob for the effort in making this video. I'm enjoying my golf more than ever thanks to you, your channel is the best. This video of Scotttie's swing was very helpful because I thought that I had to lean more back on setup with the driver, which didn't work so well for me. Seeing Scottie standing straighter makes me feel better and I will continue doing the same.
Fantastic stuff Rob!!! Please keep them coming.
Went out with a set of MacGregor A703 century irons. I have a 22 handicap but my lower end of the bag is pretty pure most of the time. +8 around 9 holes is my best 9 so far. Thanks for the hit hard stop short drill rob
Great video Rob and sequences of Scottie's swing. You recommend 80/20 weight with driver. I'm assuming its the same for hybrids and irons ??
Great Vid! But need some clarification/detail. It is important to me for you to keep measuring the energy transfer from initial setup to transition to follow through: 80/20 at set up to 90/10 at top etc. Secondly, it looks like your hips are level (and maintain mostly level) through impact. It is your shoulders that are tilted down not hips so much! Is that right? When I get hips aren't level for me, I get too much tilt behind the ball and stub the club in the ground. Thank you for your hard work.
@@golftecasia Thanks!!!!
Beautiful swing from Scottie!! I recently filmed myself & the improvement this winter hitting foam balls inside has been astronomical! Than you Golftec guys in Singapore! Now I have to take that swing outside with my driver, which I can't swing inside lest I destroy the ceiling in my rec room.
Great videos on the latest tour winners. All have their unique quirks but most important is what recreational golfers can learn from these great players. Gives the channel a nice little variety and flavor of the week learning oportunity.
Great content Rob, keep up the good work. I’m searching for more info on the friend in Stuart Fl, 24/7 but cannot find anything. Could you provide some help about location.
Hi, Rob, Your 80/20 weight distribution and try to keep it unchanged in whole siwng helps me a lot of for driver and irons.
@@golftecasia By the way, the swing hard and stop fast helps my irons a lot, but for driver, I need time to feel this move.
Love your videos - got an idea for a concept that I've never seen addressed anywhere else...
In Stack and Tilt there is a focus on weight forward and all the focus seems to be on this. But what about your weight as it relates to toes-heel in your left and right leg? Traditional golf says backswing = weight moves to left foot toe, right foot heel; downswing = weight moves to left foot heel, right foot toe. Since we're keeping so much weight forward, what is 'best practice' with S&T?
Main reason I ask: I tend to not get my weight back on to left heel at impact and follow through - which then causes heel shots (and even shanks) as my weight is too far forward. But I'm struggling on the idea of what exactly I should be doing and any drills to fix this... Should I have my weight on left heel and it never leaves that?
Having troubles getting the hips forward. What muscles are you using ? Or what are you feeling to get forward? Are you pushing off the trail leg?
Great video like always
Rob, this move is something I am working on with my Golftec coach. If I understand correctly you recommend a rotation of the pelvis, as a feel, to transition pressure as opposed to bumping the hip?
Does anyone notice how tall he is? Mr. Scheffler is 6'3'. Every golfer is different. I have long arms and short legs. If I use the same swing plane and hip thrust as Scottie the results would be catastrophic. Rob you are a great coach and Scottie is the hottest golfer in the last 20 years.
Thanks Rob. Can you recommend a S&T trainer in San Francisco North Bay Area, say around Sonoma, Petaluma or Santa Rosa area?
Really enjoy your very professional videos.
Thanks for your channel. Very informative. Quick question on setup. Do you setup with weight balanced on the balls of your feet or is it more toward the heel?
I was trying your set-up (80-20) and I couldn't eliminate hitting behind the ball particularly with longer clubs during the down swing. When I look at Scottie's set-up at 0.29, it appears that he is 50-50. And at 2.02/3.02, based on his upper body tilt, his weight is more towards his right leg or behind the ball rather than at the left leg. I think this enables him to "swing thru the ball" with the driver.
Rob, Very helpful video. I had thought that the head position at the top of the backswing and at impact was supposed to be at the right of the body center, I mean further away back from the target. The reason being that I had thought that that head position would help to shallow both the shaft in the down swing and the angle of attack/impact. Now, I realize that wasn’t entirely correct. Best wishes,Thanks.
Great insight Rob! I just watched your driver series for P1-P8 & this video is a great companion piece.
Can you go over what you are thinking, or not thinking, during the swing? I know I hyper focus on a few things which I think is affecting my swing, like hitting center of the face but I haven’t moved my lower body enough.
Rob, would comment on the amount of upper body extension at the top of Scottie's backswing? He appears to exhibit as much "wood chopping" motion as any Tour Pro I've seen on the backswing (on the follow-through as well). I'm sure it contributes to a huge shoulder turn and steady head, but doesn't there HAVE to be some influence on transition where you're borderline losing balance TOWARDS the target in a "drift" (a/k/a prop drill-like) move? Would love your thoughts. Thanks!
@@golftecasia Makes sense. Back to a look at the prop drill! 😁Thanks!
Keep the content coming Rob, every one is a bit of an eye opener for me at the moment as a recent convert to the dark side
Personally, I find the focus on swing mechanics that follows the success of one golfer or another tiresome. Let's face it, winning is so much about putting, short game, competitive temperament and current level of confidence, yet every time someone goes on a streak his technique becomes the fad of the day. We see players come and go from that number one spot with all sort of variations in mechanics. Donald, Harrington, Westwood, McIlroy, Johnson, Koepka, Rahm, Speith, etc, etc, etc. It goes on and on. Then come the boomers who fade in and out of fashion.
Scheffler will be no different. No one will care about his action as soon as his putting goes.
Bottom line for improvement .... drop the obsession with golf swings and sharpen up your short game ..... unless your idea of "improvement" is how far not how many?
@@golftecasia That maybe so, but my point is why do coaches push the swings of whoever is playing well at the time?
I wouldn't copy Westwood or Speith's "chicken wing", or Johnson's wrist just because they got to number one? And Sheffler's mechanics are pretty useless to a short golfer where Woosnam (also a former no. 1) is a far better role model.
Then there's de Chambeau, an interesting person, but someone who is single-handedly ruining golf for those silly enough to copy him. Seems he's now injured. Personally I don't believe his version of how he got injured; that would undermine him. His driving range slugging sessions and apparent obsession with distance far more likely to be the reason he has two injuries.
Just my opinions; been there and had a long life in the game seeing dozens of fads come and go along with the players ...
@@golftecasia A good role model for a taller man perhaps? If you have height you can crash into the ball from aloft but if not, you need to shift your weight in an athletic way and in place (with the golf swing) just like any thrower, racquet player, batsman, baseball hitter, pitcher, shot putter, etc, etc ; that's where I think this action misleads ... but I'm sure you've heard that criticism many times if you push Stack &Tilt?
Another great video. Thank you so much for all your videos they help me so much. 😉🏌♀️🏌♂️🏌