The 3 Shots You Need To Break 80
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The 3 Shots You Need To Break 80

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The 3 Shots You Need To Break 80

Breaking 90 and 100 requires eliminating big mistakes and learning to keep the ball in play. Breaking 80 is different. The strokes that move you from the mid-80s into the 70s are much smaller—measured in fractions of a stroke, not blow-up holes.

Low 80s players already strike it well. According to Shot Scope data from millions of tracked rounds, the separation between an 82 and a 78 doesn’t come from miracle shots. It comes from tightening tee-shot dispersion, controlling trajectory from the rough inside 100 yards and turning long putts into stress-free tap-ins.

Here are the three shots that statistically move golfers from the low 80s into the 70s.

Shot No. 1: The 250-yard tee shot that stays in play

Even at this level, tee shots remain the single biggest separator. Shot Scope shows golfers trying to break 80 lose 1.4 strokes per round off the tee compared to players already scoring in the 70s.

The key is avoiding trouble. Penalties, punch-outs, blocked drives and unpredictable misses stall scoring faster than anything else. Golfers who consistently break 80 keep their tee shots in play and keep the clubface stable enough to eliminate the two-way miss.

How to improve:

  • Prioritize dispersion first, distance second. A playable 250-yard drive beats a 280-yard drive in the trees.
  • Pick a start line that matches your shot shape (even if it’s subtle).
  • Track where your tee shots actually finish (left/right tendencies) and adjust your targets accordingly.

Shot No. 2: The 10–30 yard shot from the rough that gets inside 10 feet

Shot Scope data shows golfers trying to break 80 lose 0.4 strokes per round on 10–30 yard shots from the rough compared to players already shooting in the 70s.

That doesn’t sound like much but over 18 holes, it adds up quickly. A player who consistently turns these shots into tap-in pars eliminates bogeys that mid-80s golfers accept as “fine.”

These shots are difficult because:

  • The rough grabs the hosel and adds unpredictable loft
  • Contact is inconsistent
  • Launch height varies more than players realize

How to improve:

  • Read the lie before choosing the shot.
  • Keep the wrists stable and rotate the body through impact to avoid flipping.
  • Use a slightly open face to avoid digging and create a predictable launch.
  • Check your wedge grooves and spin consistency to make sure you have the right equipment in play.

Shot #3: The 20– to 40-foot putt that avoids the three-putt

Players chasing the 70s don’t make many 40-footers. What they do exceptionally well is avoid three-putting from this range.

Shot Scope shows golfers trying to break 80 lose strokes on 20– to 40-foot putts compared to players already breaking 80.

How to improve:

  • Focus on speed first, line second. Distance control is very important with these putts.
  • Match your backstroke length to your desired pace and keep it consistent.

Practice Drill:
Set an alignment stick about three feet behind a hole. Hit putts from 20, 30 and 40 feet away and get them to land in the space between the back of the cup and the alignment stick (without going over).

Final thoughts

Breaking 80 demands refinement. You need a stable tee shot, precise short-game control from the rough and lag putting that eliminates three-putts. These aren’t glamorous shots but they are the ones that statistically separate a 78 from an 83.

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For You

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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

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Pineneedlespro

      7 months ago

      Breaking 80 is a numbers game:
      If a golfer (no matter which tees you play) can hit 9 greens in regulation, have no more than 32 putts, get up and down 50%, and miss no more than 2 fairways you got a score of 79 or better.

      Reply

      Foster Atteberry

      7 months ago

      Very well said, Brittany. I can identify with these points as I have only broken 80 3 times this year(Jan-Nov). Normal play is 83-88. Playing Senior tees at 5,000+ yards, there are several times where I cannot use my driver and go for my 7 wood.or 5 hybrid. As for putting, I usually have between 26-34 putts per round. I am aiming for 20-25.

      Reply

      Chris W

      7 months ago

      220 is all you need to break 80, 250 is to break 70.
      And avoid penalty strokes that lead to doubles or triples.

      Reply

      vito

      7 months ago

      Depends on which tees you play.

      Reply

      Richard

      7 months ago

      Well said. More true than not.

      Reply

      Dok

      7 months ago

      You need a lot more than 250 off the tee to break 70 my friend. A lot more.

      Reply

      Kenny B

      7 months ago

      “The strokes that move you from the mid-80s into the 70s are much smaller—measured in fractions of a stroke, not blow-up holes.”

      No, it’s blow-up holes. We all have blow-up holes; we just have more of them than the 70’s shooters. One blow-up hole can move a score from 78 to 82, and it doesn’t have to happen from OB, trees or penalty areas… a mis-hit, a bad lie, a bad break, poor bunker technique, putt mis-read, etc. we all get them, including pros. A consistent 70’s shooter is better at recovering, and that comes from skill, experience and practice.

      Reply

      WBN

      7 months ago

      Agree completely. One or two blow up holes can ruin a round and deflate momentum.

      Reply

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