Breaking 80

Common Mistakes in Breaking 80

Clean up the subtle habits that keep good players stuck just above 80.

Common Mistakes in Breaking 80 illustration

Chasing pins you haven’t earned

A player trying to break 80 often has enough skill to be tempted by every flag. But a back-right pin over a bunker is not the same as a middle pin with room around it. Short-siding yourself twice can erase an otherwise solid ball-striking day.

Ignoring wedge numbers

From 50 to 120 yards, guessing is expensive. If your 54-degree carries 85 on a stock swing and 70 on a three-quarter swing, write it down and use it. Better wedge control turns approaches into birdie putts instead of defensive chips.

Quiet mistakes

  • Taking aggressive lines with a cold driver.
  • Leaving uphill putts short all day.
  • Failing to adjust for flyer lies.
  • Playing recovery shots that bring double into play.

Better choices

Before each shot, ask: where is the big number? Then choose the club, target, and shape that keeps it away. Breaking 80 is not cautious golf; it’s committed golf with a smarter margin.