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Why You Miss Breaking Putts On The Low Side
That six-footer for birdie never touched the hole. The breaking putt slid by on the “amateur side” while your playing partner drained theirs. You missed low because you don’t trust the break and your stroke knows it.
Missing on the low side is golf’s most expensive putting mistake. It costs you the putt you missed and the confidence you lost. Understand why it happens and you’ll start seeing breaking putts drop instead of slide by.
Why missing low is worse than missing high
Miss a putt on the high side and at least you gave it a chance. The ball traveled over the hole, touched the break and found out if it was enough. You got information.
Miss low and you learned nothing. The ball never challenged the cup. You played so far below the actual line that you’ll never know if your read was right. You just know you missed and now you’re second-guessing everything.
Tour players tend to miss more putts on the high side than the low side. Amateurs do the opposite. That’s not a coincidence.
The real reason you aim below the break
You don’t trust the slope.
You read the putt, see the break and intellectually understand the ball needs to start right of the hole (for a right-to-left putt). But standing over it, that line looks wrong. It looks like you’re aiming to miss. Your brain screams that starting the ball three inches right will send it sailing past the cup.
So you compromise. You aim a little less right than your read suggested. You dial back the break by 10 or 20 percent. Conservative. Safe.
Wrong. You’ve just guaranteed a miss on the low side.
Pattern 1: Reading correctly, aiming wrong
You’ve got the read right. You can see the slope; you’ve walked around the hole, you know this putt breaks eight inches left to right. Then you set up and aim for four inches of break.
The cause: Visual discomfort. The correct starting line looks too far from the hole. Your eyes see a straight line between ball and cup and anything else feels like aiming into oblivion. This gets worse on severe slopes where the true line might start a foot outside the hole.
The fix: Pick your apex point, not your starting line. Find the highest point where your ball needs to travel, the spot where it stops climbing the slope and starts falling toward the hole. Commit to rolling your ball over that spot. This shifts your focus from the scary starting line to a target you can trust. During warmup, place a tee at your apex point on breaking putts and practice hitting it.
Pattern 2: Correct read and aim but pulling the stroke
You’ve read it, aimed it and trusted the line. Then your stroke pulls the ball back toward the hole during the hit. You’ve subconsciously steered it low because you still don’t believe.
The cause: Your hands take over at impact. They manipulate the putter face to send the ball where you think it should go instead of where you aimed. This happens when your conscious mind accepts the read but your subconscious rebels.
The fix: Make practice strokes looking at your apex point, not the ball. Get your body comfortable with the sensation of swinging the putter along the line you’ve chosen. Then, during your actual stroke, focus on your shoulder rotation, not the ball or the hole. Your shoulders should rock along the line you’ve set, with your hands just going along for the ride. Trust the line, then get out of your own way.
Pattern 3: Under-reading the slope entirely
You think it breaks two inches. It breaks six. You aimed exactly where you intended, hit it perfectly, but still missed low.
The cause: Poor green reading skills, usually from not accounting for the last three feet of roll and the fact that breaking putts curve most dramatically as they slow down. Many golfers read the putt from their ball to the hole but forget that the ball will be moving slowest (and breaking hardest) right before it drops.
The fix: Read every breaking putt from the hole backward to your ball. Start behind the cup and trace the line in reverse. This forces you to see the critical final break. Also, watch your playing partners’ putts on similar lines. Every putt you observe is a free lesson in how that green slopes.
The commitment drill
Find a six-foot putt with six inches of break. Read it, pick your line, and commit fully. Aim for about 30 percent more break than you think you need. Hit 10 putts.
You’ll miss some high, which is the point of this drill. That means you’re finally giving yourself a chance.
Your goal isn’t to make every putt. It’s to eliminate low-side misses completely. Once you’re comfortable being aggressive with breaks, you can dial it back by five percentif needed. But most golfers need to add 30 percent more break to their reads, not subtract.
Stop negotiating with the slope. Read it, trust it and roll the ball over your apex point. The hole is bigger than you think when you play enough break.
The post Why You Miss Breaking Putts On The Low Side appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

