Cameron Young can still be (ignore the word, at the moment) younger than you think.
This is the type of illusion that comes from having a great -time novice season in PGA Tour; You become part of the furniture immediately. Other things make young people look elderly: thick beards, many children, the preference for silence on the presence of social media. It doesn’t matter, of course. Age is just a number, especially in Golf, where player premiums come with different vineyards. But when you remember that the young man is only 28 years old, that this is only his fourth season on his tournament, his Progress Soon it feels like the beginning of something bigger.
So far, the PGA Tour World is rotated in the memory. On the play off. But my mind is still in what happened in Greensboro last week, where Young saved yourself from a tedious line of questions – When will you finally win – And now he can continue with his career. And while his explosion victory was impressive from the beginning to the end, I was more intrigued by the way he explained it. It was not just a matter of the roulette that went down to its number, a simple combination of chance and time. Young has been in the lab. He has been swinging. And he made four interesting changes along the way to a progress.
Let them dive inside.
(Note: I wrote about Young Ryder’s dilemma – and these changes – in Monday’s ending at the beginning of this week.)
1. He changed the cadites.
Young Caddy’s story is intriguing, to say at least; One of his closest college friends withdrew for him at the Korn Ferry tournament and the beginning of his PGA Tour’s novice campaign, but he has been danced among some other figures set in the years since. This summer, however, he seemed to go down something special when he hired his college team friend, Demon Wake Deacon Kyle Sterbinsky, in front of the Championship in May. They found something right away, finishing T7 that first week, adding T4 to the RBC Canadian Open and US Open and then joining for victory in Wynham.
“Some of them are simply grinding in tougher and finding the best ones. He’s one of my best friends, a college team friend. He’s great in reading the greens,” Young said.
This last part is particularly obvious: Young has won strokes from the nine beginnings since the beginning of their partnership and he led Wyndham to the strokes. These three months have so far been the best performance of his pro career.
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2. He changed golf balls.
Young put a new ball in the game before Wyndham: a mysterious prototype Title prov1x, “something we worked on for the past nine, the last 10 months,” he said. Young has always been a high -rotating player; It is right to assume that this new ball helps reduce the rotation.
“It’s very much, very similar to what I was playing before, it’s just a little different,” Young said. “I think she definitely contributed to some of the good games this week, so I’m excited for the coming weeks.”
3. He changed the ball flights.
This is a testimony to trust your shaky DNA – and also encouraging news for every golf ball drawer there that feels like it has taken over. Young said that about 10 days ago, he turned back to striking drawings, something he would have done much more often when he first returned.
“In trying to learn some more shots, I went to the other side,” he said. In other words, in pursuing a more neutral ball flight, he felt like he lost part of his shaky identity and some of his repetition. In Greensboro he committed to hit the draws EVERYWHERE.
“I’m sure there is a couple that you can turn into some right pins, where conventional wisdom says don’t start it right on the eve of, but I told myself that I would do it and grip it all week,” he said. He spoke of not having to “start” ahead of each blow. “I think it can be difficult at some points, but now it looks like maybe part of the answer, who knows,” he tightened. He felt that he helped him go to some runs, collecting the care of the birds after another as he entered the area with his narrow draws. It will be interesting to see if he holds it by moving the same way.
4. He changed the minds.
This may be a little more abstract; The previous three changes were concrete and tangible, while this was more difficult to put your finger. But I would categorize Young’s attitude as straightforward and determined, while he has also maintained a focus with big pictures.
It was interesting that on Friday, two days before his victory, still outside the photo of everyone’s Ryder Cup, Young declared his bold goals: he wanted to be in Bethpage as part of this American team.
“To me is not necessarily for this week. I have a goal,” he said. “In mid -September I would like to be in New York playing on that team Ryder Cup. I have tried to watch it. If I can achieve it, I can achieve many things during these next four weeks.”
He still has that opportunity; Young is up to No. 21 in the world, No. 16 in FedEx Cup, No. 15 in the Ryder Cup rankings of the US. It is impossible to know which of these changes – if any – took it over the line in Wyndham. It is also impossible to know if this was a sign of high water for young people. For example, Thomas Detry’s victory in Phoenix feels like an ancient history; It has not ended better than T18 in 17 stars since then. But for young people, this feels like the beginning of something great. He witnessed something on Sunday, and now he has the chance to continue to try it.
Dylan dethier
Golfit.com editor
Dylan Dothier is an elderly writer for Golf Magazine/Golf.com. Native Williamstown, Mass. Dothier is a graduate of Williams College, where he graduated in English, and he is the author of 18 in Americawhich details last year as an 18-year-old living out of his car and playing a round of golf in every state.

