Breaking 80

Making Breaking 80 More Like Real Golf

Practice the uneven lies, awkward yardages, and pressure routines that decide whether a good round survives the back nine.

Making Breaking 80 More Like Real Golf illustration

Good range swings are not enough

Breaking 80 often falls apart on the shots that don’t look dramatic: a downhill wedge from 78 yards, a fairway bunker layup, a lag putt over a ridge, or a 5-iron where the only bad miss is left. Practice has to include those moments.

Build real-golf reps

  • Hit approach shots after a full pre-shot routine, not from a rapid pile.
  • Practice wedges from in-between yardages with different trajectories.
  • Drop balls in imperfect lies around the green.
  • Play nine-hole putting games with a score.

Back-nine pressure

Create a finish drill: five shots, each with a named target and named safe miss. You need three successes to “break 80.” If you fail, repeat another day, not immediately. Let the consequence sit a little.

Final thought

The closer you get to 79, the more your misses matter. Real-golf practice teaches you to manage them before the card gets expensive.