5 Golf Course Management Myths That Are Quietly Costing You Strokes
Instruction

5 Golf Course Management Myths That Are Quietly Costing You Strokes

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

5 Golf Course Management Myths That Are Quietly Costing You Strokes

You don’t have to swing it like a tour pro to shave strokes off your scorecard. For many golfers, the problem isn’t mechanics, it’s decision-making. With data from Shot Scope, we put together five golf course management myths that could be costing you strokes.

1. “The center of the green is always the safe play.”

The center of the green can be a safe play but it’s not always the safest. For most golfers, the biggest miss isn’t left or right, it’s short.

For a 15-handicap golfer, 54 percent of all approach shots finish short and only 23 percent find the green.

That means “aim for the middle” doesn’t always make sense. If there’s water or a bunker in the front-center portion of the green, aiming there and missing short could put you in more trouble.

Ultimately, the best strategy comes from knowing your numbers. Track where you miss, how far your shots really carry, and use that information to plan smarter targets. Just keep in mind that the majority of shots golfers miss going into the green come up short.

2. “The 3-wood is the safer option off the tee.”

While it’s often been thought that the 3-wood is safer than a driver from the tee, that’s not the reality. The numbers don’t support it.

For a 25-handicap, the 3-wood hits 45 percent of fairways with a five-percent penalty rate. The driver hits 47 percent of fairways with fewer penalties (three percent). Even among five-handicaps, the difference in fairway percentage is only two points: 51 percent with the 3-wood versus 49 percent with the driver. The important thing to note is that the driver distance is, on average, 20 yards further.

Unless the hole shape or hazard truly removes the driver from play, 3-wood off the tee often adds distance to your next shot without improving accuracy.

3. “Par-3s are scoring holes.”

Par-3s are shorter holes but that doesn’t make them easy. Because they look straightforward, golfers often expect birdie looks. The numbers say that a par on a par-3 is a good score. For some players, it’s a really good score.

Handicap100–150 yd GIR %150–200 yd GIR %Avg ScoreProximity (100–150 yd)Proximity (150–200 yd)
0 (Scratch)65 %53 %3.231 ft43 ft
551 %39 %3.439 ft54 ft
1042 %28 %3.748 ft70 ft
1537 %20 %3.957 ft92 ft
2029 %18 %4.064 ft100 ft
2521 %9 %4.270 ft118 ft

Even single-digit players miss almost half of their par-3 greens. For a 15-handicap, fewer than four in 10 shots hold the green and the average proximity is 57 feet. Not birdie territory.

The smarter way to play par-3s is to treat them as “controlled-par” holes. Take one extra club, play to the fat side of the green and build a plan that eliminates short-side trouble.

4. “I need to make a few birdies each round to score well.”

Birdies are great but pushing for birdies could be hurting your golf course management. In reality, you don’t need more birdies; you need fewer doubles.

The average 15-handicap makes fewer than one birdie per round (0.36) but more than four doubles (4.68).

Birdies are rare for amateurs because they require several consecutive good shots. Doubles, on the other hand, usually come from one poor recovery decision or a risky play that snowballs. The concept here is to stop chasing the birdies and focus on keeping the golf ball in position and eliminating double bogeys.

5. “I just need to get my lag putts inside three feet.”

Smart course management may include just trying to get your lengthy first putt within a three-foot circle, but it’s not the whole story.

If you look at data for a 15-handicap golfer, 55 percent of missed putts stop short of the hole. That means many players never give the ball a chance to go in.

The goal isn’t simply to “get it close.” When you run it past the hole and can trust yourself to make the putt coming back, you’re giving yourself a real chance to score low. Three feet short might look safe, but it removes any chance for the ball to drop.

Lag putts aren’t just about avoiding three-putts. Great lag putters give themselves a chance to make the putt.

Set up to practice on a putting green and put an alignment stick on the ground three feet past the hole. Make putts where the ball stops behind the hole but before the alignment stick.

Final thoughts

Every player wants to swing better but most of the time, smarter decisions fix your scorecard faster. Track your stats and know your averages if you want to start saving more strokes.

For You

For You

News
Jun 19, 2026
USGA Spot On With Shinnecock Setup During Blustery Opening Day
News
Jun 19, 2026
PAYNTR’s Rise Is No Accident: Five MyGolfSpy Members Tested The Reserve Classic Tour RS
News
Jun 19, 2026
Scratch By 50: I Switched From The Worst-Rated Driver To The Best-Rated Driver
Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      B

      7 months ago

      That’s really some rough advice for long lag putts.

      Reply

      The Swami

      8 months ago

      avoiding center of green as a myth due to the rare instances there are hazards only in front of the center of the green is absurd.
      how many holes does the average golf course have where the ONLY trouble is middle green aimpoint short? 1? 0? they exist to be sure, but they’re likely also coming with additional extended hazards to both sides, and then aiming at a side will make it even worse.
      if amateurs like us wanna score, the center of the green is where they should be aiming. period. do I do this? of course not. but it’s not a myth and i know i should be. and it’s not because of the once a month hole that has a bunker ONLY in center-front of the green.

      Reply

      Morse

      8 months ago

      I believe it was Ben Hogan who advocated a short miss versus flying over the green. His logic was that you don’t know what lies behind many greens. Also, many of the greens I encounter slope back to front, so parking a ball above the whole or behind the green makes for an onerous recovery.

      Reply

      Morse

      8 months ago

      Correction – hole.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      8 months ago

      3 feet is 3 feet but it is beyond ridiculous advice to advocate trying to always run a long-ish lag putt past the hole when there may be only a 5% chance it will go in. Lag putts should be intended to leave the ball where the next putt has the best chance of going in–often a straight putt uphill, rather than leaving something 3 feet past which is a steep downhiller or sidehill breaker.

      Reply

      Joe

      8 months ago

      Have you ever read the DECADE stats on lag putting?

      Reply

      Pat

      8 months ago

      Sprinted to the comments for a DECADE reference.

      My guess is they have not.

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    News
    Jun 19, 2026
    USGA Spot On With Shinnecock Setup During Blustery Opening Day
    News
    Jun 19, 2026
    PAYNTR’s Rise Is No Accident: Five MyGolfSpy Members Tested The Reserve Classic Tour RS
    News
    Jun 19, 2026
    Scratch By 50: I Switched From The Worst-Rated Driver To The Best-Rated Driver