You break 90 regularly. Some days you’re in the mid-80s. But that elusive 79 keeps slipping away and it’s not always obvious why.
The honest answer is that breaking 80 requires a higher standard of golf than breaking 90 did. The gap between these two scoring thresholds is bigger than most people expect. Shot Scope tracked more than 74 million shots across 870,000 rounds in 2025 and the data gives us more insight.
Here are five reasons breaking 80 is so much harder than breaking 90.
1. There is almost no room for a double bogey
To shoot 79 on a par-72 course, you’re just seven over par. If you make one double bogey, you’ve wasted two of those strokes on a single hole and everything else has to be nearly perfect.
Players averaging 85 make 2.88 double bogeys per round. Players averaging 79 make 1.44. Half as many. That single difference accounts for nearly three strokes.
And doubles happen fast. You miss a green, the chip runs past the hole, and then you three-putt. When you were shooting 95, a double was painful but survivable. At 79, there’s almost nowhere to hide it.
2. Just getting on the green is no longer good enough
When you were learning to break 90, hitting the general area of the green was progress. It got you on or close in regulation, it gave you a putt at par and kept the big numbers away. That was enough.
Breaking 80 raises the standard. It’s not enough to find the green anymore. Players who shoot in the 70s are consistently leaving themselves shorter putts.
The greens-in-regulation rate from 100 to 150 yards tells the same story: 47 percent for the 79 shooter, 41 for the 85 shooter. Across a round, that works out to roughly one extra missed green. One more chip under pressure.
3. Your margin for error around the green shrinks, too
Getting the ball somewhere on the putting surface used to be fine. To break 80, it matters a lot where on the putting surface the ball ends up.
The up-and-down rate shows 47 percent for the 79 shooter versus 39 for the 85 shooter. That eight-point gap comes largely from consistency. The ability to get up and down saves the bogey and the potential double that the scorecard has no room for.
4. You have to make more of the putts you used to two-putt
From nine to 12 feet, players averaging 79 make 34 percent of their putts. Players averaging 85 make 26 percent.
At this length, two-putting and moving on feels like the sensible expectation. These putts come up often in a round and it’s not longer going to work just to get them close. At 26 percent, you’re making one in four. At 34 percent, you’re making one in three.
5. You have to sustain it for all 18 holes
Breaking 90 rewarded better decision-making. Laying up instead of going for it. Taking the safer line off the tee. Those decisions pay off quickly when you have room to make bogeys and even a few doubles.
Breaking 80 asks for something harder to develop: the ability to execute at a higher standard, hole after hole, for an entire round. Not just hitting greens but hitting the right part of the green. Not just getting up and down sometimes but doing it consistently enough that the doubles stop happening. The margins are smaller, the standard is higher, and it has to hold for all 18 holes.
That’s why it takes so long. And that’s why when it finally happens, it feels like such a big deal.
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