Golf Journal by John Paul Newport THE MADNESS IN THE METHOD.
Page W4. 2nd paragraph: "but nobody would confuse Stack and
Tilt with the swing detailed in "The Golfing Machine," a thick 1969
instruction manual by Homer Kelley which also has many devotees
on the PGA Tour, including most avidly Steve Elkington." Lots more
to read.
Golf Journal by John Paul Newport THE MADNESS IN THE METHOD.
Page W4. 2nd paragraph: "but nobody would confuse Stack and
Tilt with the swing detailed in "The Golfing Machine," a thick 1969
instruction manual by Homer Kelley which also has many devotees
on the PGA Tour, including most avidly Steve Elkington." Lots more
to read.
TGM is not a method, as Homer Kelley and Yoda would have it anyways.
Others may try to make it so, but that was never Mr Kelleys intention.
OB
Yep. The spirit of TGM is that there's no one way to swing a golf club and hit it effectively. I get the feeling some teacher, and from the sounds of it I can guess who, probably erroneously told him that TGM is one method of hitting along with some other erroneous stuff about TGM as well.
'For those who believe, no explanation is necessary. For those who don't believe, no explanation will do.' - an old saying
Yep. The spirit of TGM is that there's no one way to swing a golf club and hit it effectively. I get the feeling some teacher, and from the sounds of it I can guess who, probably erroneously told him that TGM is one method of hitting along with some other erroneous stuff about TGM as well.
'For those who believe, no explanation is necessary. For those who don't believe, no explanation will do.' - an old saying
3JACK
John Paul Newport wrote about Ben Doyle as well. John Paul Newport is a fan of TGM and knows there is more than one way to skin a cat.
John Paul Newport wrote about Ben Doyle as well. John Paul Newport is a fan of TGM and knows there is more than one way to skin a cat.
When I read this:
Quote:
The Stack and Tilt swing may remind some of the Natural Golf swing popularized by Canadian Moe Norman, but nobody would confuse Stack and Tilt with the swing detailed in "The Golfing Machine," a thick 1969 instruction manual by Homer Kelley which also has many devotees on the PGA Tour, including most avidly Steve Elkington.
One thing all these swing styles have in common is that they are marketed -- by some, at least -- as the one true way.
Perhaps Newport has either changed his mind about TGM or is just trying to 'make the column' for his case about the Stack N Tilt. But it's not a swing, it's 'swings' detailed in TGM. And really TGM is about all of these true ways or as Mr. Kelley stated in 1-H
'There is no effort to classify any Stroke Pattern as the best or the worst, except on the basis of Mechanical Advantage. But there is undoubtedly a best 'central' Stroke Pattern for each individual.
I don't want to come off as upset by the article, but I do think it's a rather gross misrepresentation of TGM. And for better or for worse I hold the media to a higher standard when it comes to accuracy, regardless of what the subject matter is.
Golf Journal by John Paul Newport THE MADNESS IN THE METHOD.
Page W4. 2nd paragraph: "but nobody would confuse Stack and
Tilt with the swing detailed in "The Golfing Machine," a thick 1969
instruction manual by Homer Kelley which also has many devotees
on the PGA Tour, including most avidly Steve Elkington." Lots more
to read.
Very good article well worth reading.
Interesting that he chose Elk as his tour TGM devotee. Elkington was one of the first, if not the first tour player to try stack and tilt.
Interesting that he chose Elk as his tour TGM devotee. Elkington was one of the first, if not the first tour player to try stack and tilt.
I don't know how accurate your information is about the Stack & Tilt part but I know he is working with Ben as well as with my trainers now. Steve is TGM all the way.
John W Rohan-Weaver CMAI, GSEM
Last edited by purehitter : 03-30-2009 at 05:34 AM.