Cameron Young’s Players Championship Victory Signals the Arrival of a Closer—and Tour Golf’s New Normal
I’ve been covering professional golf since 1991, and I’ve learned that the tour operates in cycles. Players arrive with tremendous promise, struggle for years through what we call “the wilderness,” and then—if they’re wired correctly—something clicks. Cameron Young’s one-stroke victory over Matt Fitzpatrick at TPC Sawgrass on Sunday wasn’t just another Players Championship result. It was a watershed moment for a player who finally proved he belongs among the tour’s elite closers.
Let me be direct: after 94 PGA Tour starts and seven runner-up finishes—the most by any golfer since 1983—there were legitimate questions about Young’s mental architecture under pressure. That’s not criticism; it’s observation. Winning is hard. Winning consistently is harder. Some players simply don’t have the neurological wiring to close it out when the moment arrives, and the tour has a way of exposing that reality pretty quickly.
What Young did on Sunday’s back nine—and particularly on holes 17 and 18—answered those questions emphatically.
The Island Green Moment
Young’s birdie on the island green 17th was the kind of shot that defines careers. With everything on the line, facing one of golf’s most intimidating amphitheaters of noise and expectation, he struck a 57-degree wedge to 9½ feet and made the putt. Then—and this is the part I want to highlight—he followed it with a 375-yard drive on 18, the longest drive by any player on that hole in the ShotLink era dating back to 2004.
“The stadium atmosphere out there is unbelievable,” Young said. “It’s so loud on 17. The way everything is raised, you just know kind of all eyes are right there on you. So there’s nowhere to hide, and I feel like I stepped up really well and hit a bunch of good shots [on] those last couple holes, so I’m very proud of that.”
In my experience, that comment tells you everything about Young’s maturation as a player. He’s not running from the pressure anymore. He’s acknowledging it, respecting it, and then stepping into it. That’s the difference between a 94-start journey and a breakthrough. Young understood the gravity of the moment, and instead of retreating into mechanical safety, he committed to aggression. His own words bear this out: “My thought process over that ball is, one, making sure that I’m committed to my line, and two, the overarching thought is I’m going to hit the best shot of my life right here.”
That’s the mentality of a closer.
The Ryder Cup Connection
What strikes me about Young’s trajectory is how his 3-1 Ryder Cup performance at Bethpage Black last September informed this week. Young went 4-for-4 in points during that European victory, and you could see the confidence that experience provided. Having performed under maximum pressure on a continental stage—where every shot matters and galleries are rabidly partisan—tends to recalibrate a player’s internal pressure gauge.
“It definitely helps,” Young said about the Ryder Cup experience. “It just provides you some kind of context for how you can perform and how you can think when you feel that way. Dealing with nerves is tricky. Your senses are kind of heightened.”
That’s a player who’s learned something about himself. Having caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, I saw firsthand how major team events can accelerate a player’s psychological development in ways that individual tournaments simply can’t. The Ryder Cup teaches you that you can survive pressure and still execute. Young proved that lesson was internalized.
The Emerging Story: Sudarshan Yellamaraju
But Young’s victory wasn’t the most fascinating narrative of the week. That distinction belongs to Sudarshan Yellamaraju, the PGA Tour rookie from Winnipeg who tied for fifth at 9-under par in his first Players Championship start.
I need to pause here and acknowledge something: Yellamaraju’s story represents a fundamental shift in professional golf that we’re only beginning to understand. This is a player who:
- Learned to swing by watching YouTube videos of Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy
- Practiced in an indoor facility for most of his childhood in Canada
- Has never had a swing coach in his entire career
- Relies on his father and caddie for feedback
- Jumped 71 spots in the world rankings (from 216th to 145th) after one week
In 35 years covering this tour, I can count on one hand the number of players who’ve reached this level without traditional coaching infrastructure. Yellamaraju’s performance suggests that the democratization of golf instruction—the internet, YouTube tutorials, accessible equipment—is creating pathways to professional golf that didn’t exist even a decade ago.
“I know I can compete and contend, and I have a lot of belief in myself, but that results-based confidence is something you can’t match,” Yellamaraju said. “Once you do something, you know you can do that, or better.”
That’s the voice of someone who understands the mental game. He wasn’t intimidated by the moment; he was liberated by it. His statistical performance—fourth in strokes gained putting (5.501), strong approach play, and second in driving distance (311.2 yards)—suggests this wasn’t a fluke week. He competed at the highest level and succeeded.
The Setbacks Tell the Story Too
Ludvig Åberg’s implosion on holes 11 and 12, where he went from leading by two to essentially out of contention, reminds us that this tour punishes indecision and greed. He started the final round with a three-stroke lead and carded a 4-over 76. That’s not a collapse of technique; it’s a failure of course management and mental discipline. Åberg’s double-bogey sequence on 12—hitting driver on a short par-4, hooking into water—is the kind of mistake that haunts players for months.
Meanwhile, Rory McIlroy’s tie for 46th, defending champion status and all, simply underscores the toll that back injuries take on elite golfers. McIlroy didn’t arrive until Wednesday, played no practice rounds, and looked rusty. Credit to him for grinding and making the cut, but his absence from contention felt significant.
What This All Means
Sunday at TPC Sawgrass wasn’t just about Young collecting the biggest victory of his career. It was about three simultaneous trends converging: the maturation of a player who’d struggled with consistency, the emergence of a new generation of self-taught international talent, and the continuing evolution of what it takes to compete at golf’s highest level in 2026.
Young answered the question that’s followed him for years: Can he close? Yellamaraju asked a question we’ve never had to seriously contemplate: Does traditional coaching even matter anymore?
The tour’s future just got a lot more interesting.

