I was not Sharp-shooting Pats video at all, It is darn good advice, especially with a scattergun. What I was more replying to was the concept of being ridgid in "stance" and having the same "stance" for everything.
A great example of this is a couple of stages long ago and far away. IN both instances the competitor was hung up in a parachute harness, one free hanging the other on an incline. Since I R.O.ed one of these fine stages I got to watch EVERYONE of the "top" shooters shoot the stage. The "force it all to fit" shooters to a person struggled mightily, because they couldn't "weight" the gun, couldn't get their feet right...etc. The Relaxed shooters all faired much better in the fact they just accepted it, didn't struggle to get to their special way to shoot, just watched the sights and pressed the trigger. It was more of a mental shift for the "rigid guys" where as the relaxed guys just delt with it right away.
Now the con. First ever Euro Shotgun Championship, there was a stage where you had to stand in the bindings of a pair of skis which were a little less than shoulder width apart. It was a 14 round slug stage. At the Beep I shot the 4 targets on the right side, loaded six and engaged the activator the swinger and the static plate and the static target, BUT after the reload I forgot to forward weight I shot the last 6 rounds standing straight up....thankfully I didn't fall over, but on my last shot I was so far off ballance backwards I had to do a quick step to keep from falling, and shoulder blocked one of the R.O.s....So where was Pat's advice then?....what I am pointing out as Mr. Kelley so aptly pointed out is you got to know when each is appropriate