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Break your level

Breaking levels in golf isn’t about chasing endless swing fixes. It’s about learning the right know-how, making smarter decisions, and managing the course like a better player.

Get clear on what to do, when to do it—and watch your scores drop as confidence rises.

Breaking 110, 100 (and later 90 and 80) isn’t a talent test. It’s a decision test.

Most golfers are close — they just don’t have the knowledge to consistently choose the smartest option when it matters. So they guess. They chase flags, take “hero shots,” and hope the swing shows up. And that’s exactly why the score won’t drop, even when the ball-striking feels “okay.” The Golfboosters Know-How course makes the breakthrough easier because it’s theory-first: you learn first, then play.

You’ll understand what actually moves a score from 101 → 99, 92 → 89, and 81 → 79 — with a clear strategy, sharper course management, and a higher Golf IQ. That means better decisions under pressure, more shots played with confidence, and a round in which you feel prepared rather than reactive. Stop guessing. Start playing smarter. And most importantly: enjoy your golf again — because the game gets a lot more fun when you finally break through.

Learn how!

Break 110 Know-How Course Plan

Breaking 110 starts with reducing chaos. This course helps newer golfers keep the ball in play, avoid disaster holes, make calmer decisions, and understand the basic know-how needed to get around the course with more control and less frustration.

Learn how to avoid the big mistakes, play smarter, and make golf feel more manageable.

Course goal

Help newer golfers reduce chaos, avoid disaster holes, keep the ball in play, and finish rounds with more control and less frustration.

Break 110 by making fewer big mistakes, choosing safer shots, and understanding how to get around the course.

Module 1: What Breaking 110 Really Means

Lessons:

  • Why breaking 110 is not about perfect technique
  • The real scoring problem: disaster holes
  • How one bad shot becomes three bad shots
  • The “playable golf” mindset
  • What a 109 round actually looks like

Main know-how:

Breaking 110 is mostly about avoiding huge numbers, not making lots of pars.

Module 2: Tee Shot Survival

Lessons:

  • Why driver is not always the right club
  • How to choose the safest tee shot
  • Where to aim when you are nervous
  • How to avoid out of bounds and water
  • The “just get it in play” strategy

Main know-how:

A safe tee shot that leaves the ball playable is better than a long shot that disappears.

Module 3: Basic Course Management

Lessons:

  • How to look at a hole before playing it
  • Where the danger is
  • Where the safe side is
  • Why aiming at the middle is often smart
  • When to lay up instead of going for distance

Main know-how:

Most beginners lose shots because they aim at trouble without realizing it.

Module 4: Getting Out of Trouble

Lessons:

  • Why recovery shots should be boring
  • When to chip sideways
  • When not to go for the green
  • How to avoid the hero shot
  • The one-shot escape rule

Main know-how:

From trouble, your first job is not to make a great shot. It is to stop the damage.

Module 5: Club Selection for Beginners

Lessons:

  • Why you need to know your real distances
  • Carry distance versus total distance
  • Why the best shot is not your normal shot
  • Choosing clubs you can actually hit
  • Creating a simple beginner distance chart

Main know-how:

Good club selection starts with honest distances, not dream distances.

Module 6: Around the Green Without Panic

Lessons:

  • The difference between chip, pitch, and putt
  • When to use the putter from off the green
  • Why simple chips beat difficult lofted shots
  • Avoiding double chips
  • Getting the ball somewhere on the green

Main know-how:

At this level, the goal is not to chip close. The goal is to get the ball on the green in one shot.

Module 7: Putting Basics to Avoid Big Numbers

Lessons:

  • Why three-putts destroy beginner scores
  • Distance control before direction
  • Reading slope in a simple way
  • The two-putt mindset
  • How to handle long putts

Main know-how:

You do not need to hole many putts to break 110. You need to stop taking four.

Module 8: Rules, Penalties and Calm Decisions

Lessons:

  • What to do when the ball is lost
  • Basic penalty rules
  • Water hazards and penalty areas
  • When to take an unplayable lie
  • How knowing the rules saves stress

By the end of the course, the golfer should know how to:

  • Keep the ball in play more often
  • Avoid unnecessary penalties
  • Choose safer clubs from the tee
  • Recover from trouble without panic
  • Get onto the green with simple shots
  • Avoid four-putts
  • Build a round around bogeys and double bogeys, not disasters

Break 100 Know-How Course Plan

Breaking 100 is not about perfect golf. It is about reducing wasted shots. This course teaches golfers how to choose safer clubs, manage trouble better, avoid triples, improve short-game decisions, and build a round that feels more structured and controlled.

Learn how to turn messy golf into smarter golf and finally get under 100.

Course goal

Help golfers move from survival golf to structured golf by reducing wasted shots, improving decisions, and managing the course with a clear plan.

Break 100 by turning chaos into control and reducing the number of double and triple bogeys.

Module 1: What Breaking 100 Really Means

Lessons:

  • Why breaking 100 is about reducing waste
  • The difference between a 104 and a 98 round
  • Why you do not need many pars
  • How double bogey golf can break 100
  • Where shots are usually lost

Main know-how:

Breaking 100 is not about playing great golf. It is about playing fewer terrible holes.

Module 2: Building a Safe Tee Strategy

Lessons:

  • Choosing the right club from the tee
  • When driver is worth the risk
  • How to find the widest landing area
  • Playing away from penalty trouble
  • Creating a personal tee-shot plan

Main know-how:

A good tee strategy gives you a chance to play the hole instead of recovering immediately.

Module 3: Smarter Second Shots

Lessons:

  • Why the second shot often decides the hole
  • When to advance the ball safely
  • When to lay up
  • Why fairway woods can be dangerous
  • How to avoid turning one miss into a disaster

Main know-how:

The second shot does not always need to reach the green. It needs to keep the hole alive.

Module 4: Approach Shot Decisions

Lessons:

  • Why aiming at flags is often wrong
  • Middle of the green strategy
  • Avoiding short-sided misses
  • Choosing enough club
  • Playing for your common miss

Main know-how:

A safe miss near the green is much better than a brave miss in trouble.

Module 5: Wedge Know-How

Lessons:

  • Understanding wedge distances
  • Full wedge versus half wedge
  • Why 30–80 yards matter so much
  • Choosing the safest landing area
  • Avoiding the big wedge mistake

Main know-how:

Wedge shots do not need to be perfect. They need to be controlled enough to avoid wasting shots.

Module 6: Short Game Priorities

Lessons:

  • Putting from off the green
  • Chip low before you chip high
  • Why simple shots win
  • Avoiding double chips
  • Getting inside two-putt range

Main know-how:

The best short-game shot is usually the simplest shot that gets the ball safely on the green.

Module 7: Bunker Basics for Score Protection

Lessons:

  • Why bunkers create fear
  • The first goal: get out
  • When to play away from the flag
  • Avoiding the second bunker shot
  • Bunker strategy, not bunker perfection

Main know-how:

At this level, a successful bunker shot is one that escapes the bunker.

Module 8: Putting to Break 100

Lessons:

  • Why speed control matters most
  • How to reduce three-putts
  • Long-putt strategy
  • Short-putt routine
  • Lag putting with confidence

Main know-how:

Breaking 100 becomes much easier when most greens take two putts, not three.

Module 9: Mental Reset After Mistakes

Lessons:

  • Why one bad shot should not ruin a hole
  • Why one bad hole should not ruin a round
  • The 10-second reset
  • Playing the next smart shot
  • Staying patient when the score matters

Main know-how:

A golfer who breaks 100 does not avoid all mistakes. They recover faster from them.

Module 10: The Break 100 Round Plan

Lessons:

  • How many mistakes you can afford
  • Planning for double bogey or better
  • Choosing safe targets
  • Managing par 3s, par 4s, and par 5s
  • Your personal 98 strategy

Breaking 100 becomes realistic when every hole has a simple, safe plan.

By the end of the course, the golfer should know how to:

  • Keep more tee shots in play
  • Stop chasing risky shots
  • Choose safer approach targets
  • Improve wedge and short-game decisions
  • Avoid repeated three-putts
  • Recover calmly from mistakes
  • Build a round that avoids triple bogeys

Break 90 Know-How Course Plan

Breaking 90 requires smarter scoring. This course helps golfers reduce double bogeys, choose better targets, understand their real shot patterns, manage par 3s, 4s and 5s more intelligently, and stay calm when the score starts to matter.

Learn how to make better decisions, avoid doubles, and play the course like a smarter golfer.

Course goal

Help golfers move from basic control to strategic scoring by avoiding doubles, improving approach decisions, and turning more holes into bogeys and pars.

Break 90 by playing smarter targets, controlling misses, and reducing the doubles that damage good rounds.

Module 1: What Breaking 90 Really Means

Lessons:

  • Why breaking 90 is about eliminating doubles
  • The difference between bogey golf and 89
  • Why pars help, but doubles hurt more
  • How to think like a smarter scorer
  • The 89-round model

Main know-how:

Breaking 90 is not about birdies. It is about keeping big numbers off the card.

Module 2: Shot Pattern Awareness

Lessons:

  • Why your average shot matters more than your best shot
  • Understanding your common miss
  • Left/right dispersion
  • Short/long patterns
  • How to choose targets based on reality

Main know-how:

Better golfers plan for their real shot pattern, not their perfect shot.

Module 3: Tee Shot Strategy for Scoring

Lessons:

  • Driver versus safer club
  • Playing to the widest area
  • Avoiding penalty-side misses
  • Knowing when distance helps
  • Knowing when distance hurts

Main know-how:

Breaking 90 requires tee shots that set up the hole, not tee shots that create stress.

Module 4: Approach Play Strategy

Lessons:

  • Why approach shots decide scoring level
  • Middle of the green as a scoring weapon
  • Playing away from short-side trouble
  • Choosing enough club
  • Knowing when not to attack

Main know-how:

The golfer who breaks 90 understands that many flags are traps.

Module 5: Par 3 Management

Lessons:

  • Why par 3s are often harder than they look
  • Choosing the correct club
  • Aiming at the safe part of the green
  • Avoiding short misses
  • Accepting bogey when the hole is difficult

Main know-how:

Par 3s should be played with discipline, not ego.

Module 6: Par 4 Management

Lessons:

  • How to plan a par 4 backwards
  • Choosing the right tee club
  • Position over power
  • Avoiding the dangerous side
  • Playing for bogey when the hole demands it

Main know-how:

A smart par 4 plan gives you a chance for par without bringing double into play.

Module 7: Par 5 Management

Lessons:

  • Why par 5s are scoring opportunities
  • When to lay up
  • When not to go for the green
  • Choosing the best third-shot distance
  • Avoiding the big number on easy holes

Main know-how:

Par 5s should be played with patience. Three smart shots often beat one brave one.

Module 8: Short Game for Bogey-Saving

Lessons:

  • Getting chips inside realistic two-putt range
  • Choosing landing spots
  • Using the lowest-risk shot
  • Avoiding short-sided panic
  • When to accept a safe result

Main know-how:

To break 90, your short game must turn trouble into bogey, not double.

Module 9: Putting to Break 90

Lessons:

  • Reducing three-putts from distance
  • Making more putts inside 3–5 feet
  • Reading greens with simple rules
  • Speed control under pressure
  • Building a repeatable putting routine

Main know-how:

Breaking 90 requires reliable two-putting and fewer careless short misses.

Module 10: Pressure and Round Management

Lessons:

  • Why golfers collapse near 90
  • How to protect a good score
  • Playing one hole at a time
  • Avoiding emotional decisions
  • The final-three-hole strategy

The closer you are to a milestone, the more conservative and clear your decisions must become.

<2>By the end of the course, the golfer should know how to:

  • Reduce double bogeys
  • Choose smarter targets
  • Understand personal shot patterns
  • Manage par 3s, par 4s, and par 5s
  • Use short game to save bogey
  • Putt with better speed control
  • Stay calm when the score is close

Break 80 Know-How Course Plan

Breaking 80 is about discipline, not perfection. This course helps stronger hobby golfers protect good rounds, avoid soft bogeys, improve wedge and approach strategy, control misses, handle pressure, and make the small tactical choices that turn 82 into 79.

Learn how to protect your score, manage pressure, and turn good golf into lower scores.

Course goal

Help strong hobby golfers move from good golf to disciplined scoring by improving tactical decisions, wedge strategy, putting performance, and pressure management.

Core promise

Break 80 by turning good ball-striking into smarter scoring and removing the small mistakes that keep rounds in the 80s.

Module 1: What Breaking 80 Really Means

Lessons:

  • Why breaking 80 is about discipline
  • The difference between 83 and 79
  • Why bogeys from good positions are expensive
  • How better players protect a round
  • The 79-round model

Main know-how:

Breaking 80 is not about playing perfect golf. It is about not giving shots away.

Module 2: Advanced Shot Pattern Strategy

Lessons:

  • Knowing your true dispersion
  • Planning for your normal miss
  • Choosing targets with margin
  • Avoiding emotional targets
  • Creating a stock-shot strategy

Main know-how:

Low scores come from controlled misses, not perfect shots.

Module 3: Tee Shot Scoring Strategy

Lessons:

  • When to attack with driver
  • When position is more valuable than distance
  • Choosing the correct side of the fairway
  • Playing away from penalty trouble
  • Building a tee strategy before the round

Main know-how:

Breaking 80 requires aggressive swings at conservative targets.

Module 4: Precision Approach Planning

Lessons:

  • Understanding pin positions
  • Front, middle, and back pin strategy
  • Avoiding short-side misses
  • Using green slopes
  • Choosing the correct miss zone

Main know-how:

A strong golfer does not just aim at the green. They aim at the right part of the green.

Module 5: Wedge Scoring System

Lessons:

  • Creating reliable wedge distances
  • Full, three-quarter, and half wedge planning
  • Choosing landing zones
  • Avoiding spin and distance mistakes
  • Turning wedge chances into birdie chances

Main know-how:

Breaking 80 often depends on converting good positions inside wedge range.

Module 6: Short Game Up-and-Down Strategy

Lessons:

  • Reading the lie around the green
  • Choosing the lowest-risk shot
  • Landing spot control
  • When to attack the hole
  • When to leave an easy putt

Main know-how:

Better short-game strategy creates easier putts and saves more pars.

Module 7: Bunker Strategy for Better Players

Lessons:

  • Understanding lie, lip, and landing zone
  • Playing to the safe side
  • Distance control from bunkers
  • Avoiding the short-side bunker mistake
  • Turning bunker shots into controlled saves

Main know-how:

At this level, bunker play is not just escape. It is damage control and par-saving.

Module 8: Putting to Break 80

Lessons:

  • Making more putts inside 6 feet
  • Speed control on fast greens
  • Green-reading discipline
  • Avoiding aggressive three-putts
  • Putting under score pressure

Main know-how:

Breaking 80 requires fewer wasted strokes on the greens, especially from short range.

Module 9: Playing in Conditions

Lessons:

  • Wind strategy
  • Firm greens versus soft greens
  • Wet fairways and reduced roll
  • Sloping lies
  • Adjusting expectations during the round

Main know-how:

Good players adapt their strategy to conditions instead of forcing their normal game.

Module 10: Score Protection and Pressure

Lessons:

  • Why good players lose 79 late in the round
  • Protecting momentum after bogey
  • Staying patient after missed birdie chances
  • Playing the smart shot under pressure
  • Closing the round with discipline

Main know-how:

Breaking 80 requires emotional discipline when the round starts to matter.

Module 11: Pre-Round Strategy and Course Mapping

Lessons:

  • How to study a course before playing
  • Identifying danger holes
  • Finding scoring holes
  • Planning tee clubs in advance
  • Creating a 79 strategy card

Main know-how:

A strong player should not discover the strategy after making the mistake.

Module 12: The Break 80 Performance Plan

Lessons:

  • Where your personal shots are lost
  • Your scoring priorities
  • Your safe stock shot
  • Your wedge scoring plan
  • Your pressure plan

Breaking 80 is personal. The final step is knowing exactly where your score leaks come from.

By the end of the course, the golfer should know how to:

  • Protect good rounds
  • Avoid bogeys from good positions
  • Choose smarter pin targets
  • Use wedge play as a scoring weapon
  • Improve up-and-down decisions
  • Putt better under pressure
  • Manage wind, lies, slopes, and course conditions
  • Finish rounds with tactical discipline