Cameron Young’s Players Victory Reveals Something We’ve Been Waiting to See: A New Generation’s Character
I’ve been covering professional golf since before Cameron Young was born, and I’ve learned that the biggest wins rarely tell you much about a player’s future. What tells you everything is how they behave in the moment when nobody’s watching—or in this case, when everybody is.
Young’s victory at TPC Sawgrass on Sunday was impressive, no question. Coming from one shot back with two holes to play to beat Matthew Fitzpatrick? That’s tournament golf at its finest. But here’s what struck me walking the grounds: it wasn’t the final round heroics that revealed the most about this kid’s potential. It was what happened after.
The Small Gesture That Says Everything
Justin Thomas waited around the 18th green to congratulate Young after his final putt. In 35 years covering this tour, I’ve seen thousands of victories. The winners blur together. But the champions—the ones who stick around—they’re different. They understand that golf at this level is a brotherhood, and that supporting your peers matters.
“I saw Justin Thomas, he waited around for me after I putted out on 18, which was super kind of him. He’s a great guy, and to see his support there was really special.”
Young’s acknowledgment of this moment during his Rich Eisen Show appearance tells me everything I need to know about his maturity. This is a 28-year-old who gets it. He understands that in professional golf, you’re competing against each other while also building a community. That’s not easy to balance, and frankly, not everyone manages it.
The Ryder Cup Blueprint
Let me connect the dots here, because I think they matter more than most observers realize. Young’s Ryder Cup performance at Bethpage last fall was a coming-out party. Playing alongside Thomas in the foursomes, he absolutely torched Ludvig Aberg and Rasmus Hojgaard, 6&5, in 13 holes. That’s not luck. That’s not even just skill. That’s nerve.
Thomas knew it then. After their match, he said:
“It was epic. I’m so proud of Cam. It’s really hard to put into words how hard it is to play with those kind of nerves, let alone in front of your home crowd. He stepped up, every situation, every time he could. It was really, really impressive to watch, and I’m very proud that he’m my partner.”
Having caddied in the ’90s, I can tell you that watching a young player perform under that kind of pressure—in front of your home crowd, with the weight of your country on your shoulders—that’s the truest test of temperament. Young passed that test. And now, less than a year later, he’s passing it again at one of golf’s most important tournaments.
What This Means for the Tour
Here’s what I think matters about Young’s trajectory: he represents exactly what the PGA Tour needs right now. Not a villain, not a manufactured storyline, but a genuinely talented player who happens to be an excellent human being. In my experience, those types rarely stay overlooked for long.
Young has now won twice on the PGA Tour. His second victory is his biggest. But more importantly, it came in the clutch, against a legitimate challenger (Fitzpatrick finished second), at a venue that doesn’t forgive mistakes. That’s the resume-building stuff that separates the contenders from the also-rans.
What strikes me most is how he’s going about it. There’s no arrogance, no social media peacocking, no manufactured drama. After his victory, Young’s priority was his family:
“Really the first moment that I had after that I got to see my family which was great. I got to see my wife and my three kids. I saw my parents briefly. So just to get even three minutes with them where it was just quiet in a room above scoring was a pretty special time.”
That comment right there? That tells me he won’t be caught up in the trappings of success. He’ll keep his foundation grounded. That matters because it’s exactly the mentality that allows players to win majors.
The Road Ahead
I’m not going to predict Young will be a major champion—I’ve learned never to do that after 35 years. But I will say this: the building blocks are all there. The talent is obvious. The temperament is evident. The character is clear. And now he has real tournament victories that matter, against fields that matter, at venues that matter.
The fact that Thomas took the time to congratulate him, and that Young recognized the gesture for what it was—genuine support from a peer—tells me something important about the culture being built on this tour. It’s competitive, absolutely. But it’s also supportive. That’s a healthy ecosystem for great golf.
Cameron Young isn’t a story yet. But he’s becoming one. And I’m genuinely excited to see where this goes.

