Six Tips To Help You Break 100
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Six Tips To Help You Break 100

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Six Tips To Help You Break 100

Breaking 100 feels impossible until it isn’t. One day you’re chunking wedges and three-putting your way to 105 and the next you’re walking off the 18th green with a 97, wondering what the hell just happened.

The difference? Usually, it’s not some magical swing tip or new driver. It’s understanding exactly where your strokes are bleeding away and plugging those leaks one by one.

To help you crack the code, we asked data experts at Shot Scope to analyze millions of rounds and identify the biggest scoring opportunities for golfers stuck in triple digits.

They came back with the Shot Scope Six—six critical areas that, when improved, can transform your scorecard faster than you’d think.

The Shot Scope Six:

  1. Number of tee shots in trouble
  2. Greens in regulation
  3. Multiple shots inside 70 yards to hit the green
  4. Number of three-putts
  5. Missed putts inside five feet
  6. Driving distance

Let’s dive into the three most impactful stats that can immediately shave strokes off your score.

Key stat #1: Tee shots in trouble

What qualifies as a troublesome tee shot? Think water balls, lost balls, tree jail or any shot that has you muttering profanities while reaching for another ball.

Troublesome tee shots

Here’s the brutal truth: golfers who typically shoot over 100 hit about eight tee shots per round that find serious trouble. That’s nearly half your tee shots ending in disaster (or at least finishing disaster-adjacent).

Each penalty stroke, each chip-out from the trees, each fairway bunker escape—they add up fast. Cut this number from eight to six and you’ve just saved yourself two to four strokes without changing your swing.

The fix isn’t sexy but it works: know your distances, play within your capabilities and leave the hero shots for the driving range. If you play the same course regularly, develop a game plan for each hole that prioritizes avoiding big numbers over maximizing distance.

Key stat #2: Multiple shots inside 70 yards to hit the green

Holes where multiple shots inside 70 yards are required

This one stings because it feels like it should be easy. You’re close enough to see the pin clearly, maybe even read the name on the golf ball sitting on the green. Then you chunk it 20 yards or blade it over the green into the parking lot.

The typical 100-plus shooter has nearly six holes per round where they fail to hit the green on their first attempt from inside 70 yards. Six holes! That’s one-third of your round where a routine scoring opportunity turns into a scrambling nightmare.

Here’s the mindset shift that can save you: when you’re inside 70 yards, forget about getting it close to the pin. Your only job is to hit the green. Any part of the green. The putting surface is your friend and putting from 40 feet beats chipping from the bunker behind the green every single time.

Key stat #3: Three-putts

Let’s be honest: putting is where dreams go to die. You can stripe a drive down the middle, stick your approach on the green and then watch your score balloon with a three-putt that would make a weekend hacker cringe.

Three putts

The data shows that golfers shooting over 100 average about five three-putts per round. Get that number down to four and you’ve found another stroke. It’s that simple.

The secret isn’t reading greens like Jordan Spieth; it’s distance control. Most three-putts happen because your first putt finishes eight feet past the hole or six feet short, leaving you with a nerve-wracking second putt that you then miss.

Focus on lag putting. Your goal on long putts isn’t to make them; it’s to get them close enough that the next one is a tap-in. Practice putting to a three-foot circle around the hole rather than trying to make everything.

The complete Shot Scope Six breakdown

Shot Scope Six – Break 100

To break 100, aim for these benchmarks:

  • No more than six troublesome tee shots (down from eight)
  • Hit four or more greens in regulation (up from two or three)
  • No more than four missed greens inside 70 yards (down from six)
  • No more than four three-putts (down from five)
  • No more than four missed putts inside five feet (tighten up those short ones)
  • Consistently hit your driver 225 yards or more (distance helps, but accuracy matters more)

The bottom line

Breaking 100 isn’t about perfection—it’s about damage control. You don’t need to hit every fairway or stick every approach. You just need to avoid the big numbers that destroy scorecards.

Track these six stats for a few rounds and you’ll quickly see where your strokes are disappearing. Maybe you’re losing three shots per round to terrible tee shots. Maybe it’s short putts. Maybe it’s chunked wedges from prime scoring positions.

Whatever it is, the data doesn’t lie. And once you know where the problems are, you can actually fix them.

Want to track these stats without doing mental math all day? Check out Shot Scope’s performance tracking products, including GPS watches, rangefinders and more to help you get the most out of your game.

They offer subscription-free access to over 100 tour-level statistics including Strokes Gained and Handicap Benchmarking because breaking 100 is just the beginning.

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      Fred Guerrero

      4 weeks ago

      Great article, I use a shot scope x5 and it has been extremely helpful as a beginner golfer. This article is another great reference I could use to try and lower my score.

      Reply

      Judy McJudgenstein

      4 weeks ago

      Golf instruction is kind of baffling when you take a step back and look at it from the outside in. For some reason it’s the one sport where we see people continually trying to do things that they have zero reason to logically think they can do so. We see golfers by the millions on courses every weekend swinging drivers like they are Rory or Bryson and getting the oppposite results time and time again. If you want to break 100 you should simply focus on the mental game and read a book like “Golf is not a Game of Perfect” by Bob Rotella. If you commit to those principles it will be hard to ever shoot over 100. If you follow his prescription for how to practice and manage the course you will never shoot over 90 on most courses after a year. I was a chronic 80s player my whole life until I found this book. Once I read it and decided I would follow these common sense ideas I immediately became a 70s player and now my handicap is 1. I don’t religiously practice, don’t have a $10k set of clubs, don’t have a swing coach etc. I simply practice my wedge game and putting way more than I hit drivers and long irons. I don’t play golf to impress golf bros and focus on hitting it big. I putt out everything, play it down and count every stroke. There are so many people out there that I call ‘approximate golfers’ that take 5 foot putts, move it around the fairway and rough, don’t really count penalty strokes. Played in a tournament this weekend with a bunch of them. The 3 guys I played with on Saturday were all supposedly 2 handicappers and we played a tournament round on a 6000 yard muni course that is incredibly tight and severe. These dudes were all talking about how short the course was and one of them shot 88, the other 85 and the other 84. They missed tons of 3 footers and couldn’t get up and down to save their lives. Pulling drivers and hitting balls OB and into trees and making triples. A couple of them were throwing hissy fits and getting mad at the course, just kind of sad.

      Reply

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    Jul 10, 2025
    Putting Fundamentals: Why Are My Putts Coming Up Short?
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