Breaking 100

Making Breaking 100 More Like Real Golf

Transfer practice to the course by rehearsing routines, recoveries, uneven lies, and one-ball pressure.

Making Breaking 100 More Like Real Golf illustration

Range rhythm is not course rhythm

On the range, you get a flat lie, a bucket of retries, and no penalty for a wild swing. On the course, one poor decision can follow you for fifteen minutes. To break 100, practice needs a little more reality.

Course-like practice ideas

  1. Play imaginary holes on the range: tee club, approach club, wedge.
  2. Practice from rough and uneven lies around the green.
  3. Use one ball for chipping and putting games.
  4. Rehearse punch-outs so trouble doesn’t become disaster.

The bogey plan

Pick a par 4 and play it as a par 5 in your mind. A safe tee shot, an advance, a wedge, and two putts is a calm bogey. That mindset removes the pressure to hit shots you don’t own yet.

Final reminder

Breaking 100 is often a discipline milestone. The swing matters, but patience, club choice, and damage control matter just as much.