SPORT / GOLF
British Open runner-up Cameron Young named PGA Tour rookie of 2022
Published: Oct 20, 2022 07:13 PM
US golfer Cameron Young plays from the 18th tee during his opening round 64 on the first day of The 150th British Open Golf Championship on The Old Course at St Andrews in Scotland on July 14, 2022. Photo: VCG

US golfer Cameron Young plays from the 18th tee during his opening round 64 on the first day of The 150th British Open Golf Championship on The Old Course at St Andrews in Scotland on July 14, 2022. Photo: VCG

American Cameron Young was named the PGA Tour's rookie of 2022 in a vote by his peers following a season in which he recorded five runner-up finishes, including at the British Open, the US-based circuit said on Wednesday.

Young, who capped a closing 65 with a 17-foot eagle putt to finish second at the British Open, was selected for the Arnold Palmer Award over South Korea's Tom Kim and American Sahith Theegala, receiving 94 percent of the membership vote.

"I know the namesake Arnold Palmer obviously was a giant in the game of golf and we have him to thank for a lot of what we do today, what the PGA Tour is," Young, 25, told reporters ahead of this week's CJ Cup in Ridgeland.

"Just to ... to be related to that in some small way is very cool. I know we had a very strong rookie class and I know it's voted by my peers, so it's a huge honor to be thought of in that way, just to kind of finish the year that way."

With his five second-place results, Young tied the most by any player in a single season over the last 40 years, with Vijay Singh in 2003 the last to accomplish the feat.

Young also recorded a pair of third-place finishes at the RBC Heritage and PGA Championship, falling one stroke out of a playoff in each.

With $6.5 million in earnings, Young made the most money in a single season by a rookie in PGA Tour history, surpassing the record previously held by Xander Schauffele, who made $4.3 million in 2016-17.

"Congratulations to Cameron Young on being voted PGA Tour Rookie of the Year by his peers," PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said.

"Cameron's career has seen a remarkable rise over the last several years, and he quickly became a favorite among fans last season with the style in which he attacks the golf course."

Reuters