How to Break 90 in Texas Heat: Course Management Tips That Work
Breaking 90 is the milestone most Texas golfers are chasing. It’s the line between a beginner and a legitimate mid-handicapper — and for a lot of players, it feels just out of reach. Here’s the truth: the gap between shooting 94 and 89 usually has nothing to do with your swing. It’s course management. And in Texas heat, smart decisions on the course matter even more.
Why Texas Heat Changes the Game
Playing in 95-degree Texas heat affects your game in ways most golfers underestimate. Fatigue sets in faster, decision-making gets sloppy on the back nine, and grip pressure creeps up when you’re sweating through your glove. Before we get into course management strategy, understand this: managing your body is half the battle. Start hydrating the night before your round, not on the first tee. Bring more water than you think you need. Eat a light snack at the turn. These aren’t extras — they’re part of breaking 90 in Texas summer.
The One Rule That Will Save You 6 Shots
Stop trying to make birdies. Seriously. Most golfers shoot in the mid-90s not because they lack the ball-striking to break 90, but because they take too many high-risk shots chasing pars and birdies they don’t need. The math on breaking 90 is simple: 18 holes, a maximum of 17 bogeys and one par — and you shoot 89. That’s it. You don’t need a single birdie. You just need to avoid big numbers.
Big numbers — double bogeys, triples, and worse — come from bad decisions, not bad swings. A snap hook into the trees followed by a hero shot that catches the lip, then a chunk into the bunker. Sound familiar? Those three shots turn a bogey into a six. Eliminate the bad decisions and your scorecard cleans itself up.
Tee Box Strategy: Play to Your Actual Distance
Most amateurs play tees that are too long for their game. If you’re averaging 220 yards off the tee, you should be playing a course that measures between 5,800 and 6,200 yards. Playing from the back tees when you’re trying to break 90 is like trying to complete a marathon before you’ve run a 5K. Move up. There’s no shame in it — and it will immediately improve your approach shots and scoring opportunities.
On Texas courses with Bermuda fairways, take one extra club than you think you need on approach shots. Bermuda rough is thick and grabs the hosel, and even a good lie in the first cut can cost you 10–15 yards of distance. Factor that in every time.
The “Miss It on the Right Side” Rule
Pick a side of every fairway and every green to miss on — and always pick the side that gives you the easiest next shot. Before you hit a tee shot, ask: if I miss this, where do I want to miss it? If there’s water left and rough right, miss it right. If there’s an OB stake right and a wide-open bail area left, favor left. You’re not aiming for the miss — you’re just tilting the odds in your favor before you pull the trigger.
This same principle applies to approach shots. If a green has a front bunker and a gentle slope behind it, missing long is almost always better than missing short. Learn to read the trouble on each hole and build your shot strategy around avoiding the worst outcome.
Short Game: Where Rounds Are Won and Lost
If you’re shooting 94, you’re probably taking 36 or more putts per round and chunking or blading chips around the greens. The fastest path to breaking 90 runs directly through your short game. You don’t need to take a lesson — though that never hurts — but you do need to practice the shots that actually show up in your round.
The chip-and-run is your best friend on Texas courses. Bermuda greens tend to be firm and fast, which means high-lofted flop shots are risky unless you have a soft lie. When you’re within 20 yards of the green with no obstacle in front of you, use a 7- or 8-iron and bump the ball along the ground. It removes the margin for error on contact and takes the Bermuda rough out of play. Practice this shot for 15 minutes before your next round and you’ll immediately start getting up and down more often.
Putting: Two-Putt Everything
Three-putts are score killers. A golfer trying to break 90 should have one putting goal: never three-putt. That means distance control is more important than line. On your first putt, your only objective is to get the ball within three feet of the hole. Forget about making the long putt — just lag it close. Bermuda greens break more than they appear and can be inconsistent in texture, especially during summer. Read the slope, play more break than you think, and focus on speed above everything else.
Managing the Mental Game in Heat
Texas summer rounds test your patience as much as your technique. By the 14th hole in August, most golfers are mentally fried. That’s when scores balloon. Here’s how to stay sharp: after every bad shot, give yourself a 10-second window to be frustrated — then let it go completely before you address the next shot. Don’t carry the last hole into the next one. Each shot is its own event. If you can maintain that discipline through the back nine in the heat, you’ll find shots you didn’t know you had.
The Pre-Round Routine That Sets You Up to Score
Arrive 30 minutes before your tee time. Spend 10 minutes on the putting green working on lag putts — not short putts. Roll a few from 20, 30, and 40 feet just to calibrate the speed of the greens. Then hit a few chips to get your feel for the short game. Finish with a handful of full swings at the range, starting with a wedge and working up to your driver. You’re not trying to fix anything — you’re just waking your body up. This routine takes 25 minutes and will drop your first-hole score by at least a stroke.
Put It Together
Breaking 90 in Texas heat comes down to three things: making smart decisions off the tee, keeping the ball in play with your irons, and limiting three-putts and short-game disasters around the greens. You don’t need to swing better. You need to manage yourself and the course better. Play smart, stay hydrated, and trust the process. Texas Golf Network will be here when you post that 89 and start chasing 79.
