
Break Explained for Putting
Break is not a number most golfers think about until a putting session makes it impossible to ignore. Once you understand what it is showing you, it becomes a useful shortcut for reading why a putt started where it did or why it rolled the way it rolled.
The goal is not to turn putting into a science project. The goal is to use one clean number to make your practice more honest and your misses easier to explain.
What Break Means
Total sideways movement from launch line. In simple terms, total side movement from launch direction when the ball reaches entry speed.
Why Golfers Should Care
Break quantifies curve amount for a putt under given speed and slope.
Use this to connect read quality and pace control.
How To Use Break During Practice
- Start on a simple, fairly flat putt so the number is easier to interpret.
- Use sets of putts, not one ball, to see whether the pattern is real.
- Pair it with launch and start-line numbers so you know whether the issue was delivery, skid, or read.
Common Mistakes
- Treating break like the only answer. Putting numbers are most useful when they confirm what the start line and roll are already telling you.
- Ignoring pace. A good-looking stroke number does not help much if distance control is still off.
Do Not Read Break Alone
Break becomes much easier to trust when you read it next to Slope % Side, Side (Putting), Entry Speed Distance. That combination tells you whether you are looking at delivery, launch, strike, or outcome.