Asked On Reddit: What Was The One Thing You Did To Start Breaking 100?
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Asked On Reddit: What Was The One Thing You Did To Start Breaking 100?

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Asked On Reddit: What Was The One Thing You Did To Start Breaking 100?

If you’re sitting on the edge of breaking 100, you’re not alone. One Redditor recently shared their journey dropping from 120-plus to nearly breaking 100. Of course, everyone wanted to know how they did it and what the one magic tip was to get it done. I’m not sure there is just “one” thing that can help you start breaking 100, though. Here are a few that I would suggest and that I’ve seen work.

Take Lessons — Then actually practice

This one isn’t the shortcut that most golfers want to hear. However, taking lessons and then practicing what you learned from them does make a difference. Lessons create understanding, help ensure you aren’t reinforcing bad habits and establish some consistency in your golf game.

If you’ve tried lessons and they didn’t work, try a new professional or ask for a way to practice what you’ve learned the right way. Also, consider a playing lesson or short-game lessons to change things up a bit.

Chipping and putting have to be the focus

You’re not going to break 100 by hitting perfect 7-irons. In fact, even gaining an extra 10 yards on your driver probably won’t be enough to help you break 100. However, if you can stop chunking your chip shots or make a fewer three-putts, it’s going to matter.

Try learning to simplify your short game. Keep the ball lower to the ground and putt every chance you have from the green. Shot Scope has done studies showing how effective it is to putt versus hitting a high-lofted lob shot into a green.

If you can chip it close and two-putt, you’ll have some of the skills necessary to break 100.

Stop taking hero shots

While eliminating these hero shots may not be enough on their own to help you break 100, they certainly can’t hurt your score. Stop thinking that the one big swing is going to fix the hole. It won’t.

  • Punch out when you’re in the trees.
  • Hit a hybrid if your driver’s inconsistent that day.
  • Aim away from trouble, even if it means a longer putt or a bogey on that hole.

Play for bogey on every hole

If your goal is to break 100, then you can give up on the concept of making a par on every hole. Instead, look at a bogey as your version of par. If you were to bogey all 18 holes on a par-72 course, you would shoot 90. Sometimes putting the pressure on yourself to make a par increases the difficulty and encourages poor decision-making.

Don’t chase pins. Get on the green in three for a par-4 and make safer decisions. You’ll eliminate quite a few of the double bogeys.

Track stats — and be honest

Stat tracking is not just for the professionals. It’s potentially even more effective for golfers who are looking to break 100 for the first time. Chances are that the “one thing” you think is holding you back from breaking 100 is not the problem.

If you use Strokes Gained tracking, you may find that you play like a 20-handicap golfer in every area of your game but chipping. From there, your path to breaking 100 will be quick and seamless.

Final thoughts

Breaking 100 isn’t about perfection. It’s about limiting disasters. Perhaps there’s one thing on this list that you haven’t tried yet but if you’re serious about reaching this milestone, I would consider all of the above. Lessons give you a foundation, short-game precision saves you strokes and smart decisions keep you out of trouble. You are probably closer to breaking 100 than you think.

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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





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      Donald Hicks

      12 months ago

      Took me 30 years to learn not to direct (push) the golfball around the course. Just line up your shot, forget about results, and trust your swing to take the ball where you want it to go.

      Reply

      Morse

      12 months ago

      Practiced. 30% range, 70% short game.

      Reply

      Rannalph Junnah

      11 months ago

      Absolutely correct. Learning how to get it up and down from off the green will melt away so many frivolous strokes in your game.

      Reply

      OpMan

      12 months ago

      Never taken a lesson my whole life.
      What clicked was just hitting 100 balls every day.
      That’s it.
      I learned the swing, the contact, and how to hit it straight, with the correct launch angle for each club.
      After that, breaking 90, then 80, was easy. Bit of putting practice and some short game of course, but being accurate, straight, and being able to hit each club as they were intended – that was all I needed.
      And I do the same to this day. Hit at least 4 to 500 balls every week just to maintain the swing and strength and tempo and physicality of the swing, keeping the callouses firm, making sure I can feel my hands on the club and feet on the ground.
      And stay fit and healthy.

      Reply

      Mr Ed

      12 months ago

      Chipping and putting are 100% the way to do it.

      Reply

      Fake

      12 months ago

      I adopted the bogey golf model, as well as aiming for the center of the green instead of pin-seeking like my more skilled partners.

      Reply

      Will

      12 months ago

      I didn’t take any lessons until after I broke 100 for the first time. I was just watching YouTube stuff and practicing on the range after work. It mostly came down to having a good day with the driver, and not wasting too many shots on bad mishits. Breaking 100 consistently did involve some lessons and improved course management, such as admitting when I’m not having a good day with the driver and that sometimes it needs to just stay in the bag.

      Reply

      MarkM

      12 months ago

      #1 absolutely is lessons and practice.
      At that level, players need to learn fundamentals of the swing and then use practice to put those lessons into action. If you’re not willing to put in some time to get better, just play to have fun with your buddies. There’s no reason to expect to improve by doing the same things you’ve been doing.

      Reply

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