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Stack & Tilt Critics Speak Out
Teachers Weigh In On Stack & Tilt
Mike Bennett (left) and Andy Plummer started teaching Stack & Tilt on the PGA Tour in 2005. Dean Wilson was their first student, and now they have more than 20 players, including Aaron Baddeley, Mike Weir, Will MacKenzie and Eric Axley. Currently they don't have a teaching base, but finding them is easy: Follow the tour.

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>IT'S NOT FOR EVERYONE
- Stack & Tilt Stack & Tilt has been presented as a new theory, but a lot of it is what Mac O'Grady has been teaching for years. Personally, I don't teach a system. I don't believe there's one set of fundamentals for everyone. And I don't think Stack & Tilt is for everyone.
-- BUTCH HARMON, No. 1 on Golf Digest's 50 Greatest Teachers in America
- PLUMMER / The explanation of the swing is what's different about Stack & Tilt, not necessarily the actual swing mechanics. Players for generations have demonstrated some of these principles. Yes, Mac O'Grady has taught some of the pieces we include in Stack & Tilt, as have many other teachers. Golf instruction has lost sight of what has made the best swings in history work: Hogan's reverse tilt at the top, Nicklaus' steady head, Snead's straight right leg on the backswing.
As to fundamentals, there should be a comprehensive system of measuring the variables of a swing. If a way of measuring everyone objectively is a system, then this is definitely a system.

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>IT MAKES THE SWING TOO STEEP
- For most amateurs, the No. 1 problem they have is coming down into the ball too steeply. When they lean left like that, it's only going to make them steeper unless they dramatically tilt their spine away from the target on the downswing. It's very difficult to make that compensating move in the 250 milliseconds it takes the club to swing down. I would only recommend it for someone who swings too much inside out, which is very few.
-- MIKE BENDER, No. 10
- PLUMMER / Most amateurs come into the ball with too shallow of a descent and too often hit the ball with an ascending blow. Most of the golfers who come to me are shifting to their back foot and then getting stuck there. As a result, their descent is shallow, with the low point behind the ball. This problem prevents them from taking divots at or in front of the ball. The main reason this happens is the center is behind the ball at impact. Stacking the tilt is the first step to getting the descent steep enough.
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