Lesson 5.4: Speed and Break – Understanding the Relationship
One of the most important — and most counterintuitive — insights in green reading is this: how hard you hit a putt changes how much it breaks. A putt hit firmly will hold its line and break less. A putt hit softly will follow the slope more and break significantly more. This means the read and the speed are not independent — they must be calibrated together.
The “dying” putt vs. the “pro” pace
A dying putt — one that arrives at the hole barely rolling, with just enough speed to fall in — will take the full amount of break the slope allows. It is maximally influenced by gravity because its forward momentum is almost spent by the time it reaches the cup. A pro-pace putt — hit firmly enough to go 12-18 inches past the hole if it misses — holds its line much better and takes less break. The trade-off: if a dying putt misses, it stops right at the hole. If a firm putt misses, it runs 12-18 inches past and leaves a second putt.
What this means for your read
Before giving a read, establish the intended pace. Most experienced players putt at a pace that would finish 12-18 inches past the hole if they miss — the standard “pro pace.” But some players prefer dying the ball into the hole. If you give a read calibrated for dying pace to a player who putts firmly, they will play too much break and miss the putt on the high side. Match your read to the player’s natural pace, not to an abstract standard.
Downhill putts — speed amplifies break dramatically
On downhill putts, speed management is the primary challenge. The ball accelerates as it rolls downhill, and even a slightly mis-hit putt that is too firm can run well past the hole and leave a very difficult comeback putt. On downhill putts, a dying pace is often the correct choice — and that dying pace means maximum break must be played. This is why downhill putts that look like one cup of break often require two cups when properly accounted for.
Uphill putts — speed suppresses break
On uphill putts, the ball is decelerating through its entire journey. Gravity’s lateral component has less influence because the ball’s forward momentum is fighting uphill. Uphill putts break significantly less than visually similar downhill putts. A player who consistently over-reads uphill putts and misses them on the high side needs to be reminded: “This one holds its line better than it looks — the slope is with you going up.”
| Putt Type | Speed Tendency | Break Tendency | Caddy Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Uphill | Ball decelerates | Breaks less | Play less break than it looks |
| Downhill | Ball accelerates | Breaks more | Play more break, dying pace |
| Firm stroke | Fast through break zone | Holds line better | Give less break |
| Dying stroke | Slows in break zone | Full slope influence | Give maximum break |
| Fast greens | Less friction | More break | Add break on all reads |
| Slow greens | More friction | Less break | Reduce break on all reads |
When your player has a downhill putt on a fast green — the most difficult combination — give them specific language rather than just a read: ‘This one needs a very soft touch — I’d think about just getting the ball to the edge and letting it fall.’ Players often know the break but misjudge the speed on these putts. Your speed guidance can be as valuable as your read.
Speed and break experiment: on a practice green, find a putt with clear side slope of about 10 feet. Roll the same putt five times: twice dying (barely reaches the hole), twice at pro pace (would finish 12-18 inches past), and once very firmly. Without marking results, watch where each ball finishes relative to the hole. Write down: how much more did the dying putts break compared to the firm putts? Was the difference more or less than you expected? This single exercise, repeated on several different putts, teaches the speed-break relationship more effectively than any description.