Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Cameron Young voted 2022 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year

Cameron Young voted 2022 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Florida – The PGA TOUR announced today that Cameron Young has been named the 2022 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year as voted by the TOUR’s membership for the 2021-22 season. Young, who made his Presidents Cup debut for the victorious U.S. Team in September, earned five runner-up finishes and ended his rookie season No. 19 in the FedExCup standings. Young, a 25-year-old native of Scarborough, New York, and a 2021 Korn Ferry Tour graduate, will receive the Arnold Palmer Award for winning Rookie of the Year. He was selected for the honor over Tom Kim and Sahith Theegala, receiving 94 percent of the membership vote. “Congratulations to Cameron Young on being voted PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year by his peers,” said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan. “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. And of course, given Cameron’s Wake Forest ties, receiving the Arnold Palmer Award as PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year will certainly hold a special significance for him.” Young’s runner-up finishes on the season came at the Sanderson Farms Championship, The Genesis Invitational, Wells Fargo Championship, The Open Championship and Rocket Mortgage Classic. With 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 T3s at the RBC Heritage and PGA Championship, falling one stroke out of a playoff in each. The nine players that finished ahead of Young in his seven top-three results are all currently ranked in the top 25 of the Official World Golf Ranking. Young, a 2019 graduate of Wake Forest University, and 2021 Arnold Palmer Award winner Will Zalatoris are the first pair from the same college to win Rookie of the Year honors in back-to-back seasons (est. 1990). The two played together for the Demon Deacons for two seasons and both earned All-Atlantic Coast Conference honors in those years (2016-17 and 2017-18). Arnold Palmer, the namesake of the award, won two individual NCAA Championship titles while at Wake Forest (1949, 1950). With $6,520,598 in Official Money in 2021-22, Young earned the most money in a single season by a rookie in PGA TOUR history, a record previously held by seven-time PGA TOUR winner and current World No. 6 Xander Schauffele ($4,312,674 in 2016-17). At No. 17 in the Official World Golf Ranking as of September 15, Young entered the 2022-23 PGA TOUR Season as the highest-ranked player without a victory in his PGA TOUR career. Scottie Scheffler was in that position at the start of last season and went on to win four times, including the Masters Tournament, and moved to World No. 1 on March 27, holding the top spot through the end of the season. Each of the last six players named PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year qualified for the 2022 TOUR Championship, with Xander Schauffele, Aaron Wise, Sungjae Im, Scheffler, Zalatoris and Young winning the award in their respective rookie seasons. With the exception of Zalatoris, who was No. 7 in the standings for the U.S. Team but withdrew his name from consideration for a captain’s pick due to a back injury, each of the last four competed in last month’s Presidents Cup. PGA TOUR members who played at least 15 official FedExCup events during the 2021-22 season were eligible to vote.

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Five wins and a lucky silver dollarFive wins and a lucky silver dollar

Phil Mickelson will defend his fifth title at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am this week. His winning years so far have included 2019 (beating runner-up Paul Casey), 2012 (Charlie Wi), 2007 (Kevin Sutherland), 2005 (Mike Weir), and 1998 (Tom Pernice, Jr.). Ultimately, though, all roads go back to 1919, the year Mickelson’s paternal grandfather, Al Santos, started as a caddie at the newly opened Pebble Beach Golf Links. “My grandfather was one of the original caddies in the caddie yard,� Mickelson said Wednesday. “He had to quit school in fourth grade to help work and support the family. … He could carry around this silver dollar here that I have. He would reach in and touch it whenever he felt poor and it made him feel like he had money. Often times, he would go to bed hungry and not eat because he wouldn’t spend it. He just wanted to always feel like he had it. “Our family has come a long ways since we look back at him caddying for 35 cents a loop.� We are all a product of our ancestors, as we’re reminded weekly by the PBS show “Finding Your Roots.� And grandfathers, so influential in the lives of so many PGA TOUR pros, have been front and center lately. Cameron Champ won the Safeway Open last fall as his grandfather, Mack “Pops� Champ, watched while on hospice in Sacramento. J.T. Poston shot a final-round 62 to win the Wyndham Championship with his grandfather Charles “Doc� Cunningham on site. Related: Power Rankings | History-making high school team set for defense Mickelson’s grandfather, who died shortly before Phil won his first major title in 2004, is always with him, in a sense, as the 44-time TOUR winner plays along this scenic coastline. This week, as he always does at Pebble, Mickelson will carry the 1900 silver dollar Al kept in his pocket and rubbed for better fortune every time he felt poor. It’s Phil’s lucky Pebble ball mark. According to Michael Bamberger’s excellent feature on golf.com last June, Al Santos was a product of Steinbeck’s Monterey, “the son of a Portuguese Cannery Row fisherman and his Portuguese wife.� He helped the family as a caddie, often doing a double-loop, and later became a tuna fisherman, captaining his own boat with his brothers off the coast of San Diego. To commemorate Mickelson’s five wins at Pebble Beach, all amateur participants this week will receive a replica of the silver 1900 Morgan dollar that has the same specifications as Mickelson’s treasured heirloom. A local artist, Ashley Bennett-Stoddard, created the coin, which has a diameter of 38.1 millimeters and weighs 26.7 grams. Mickelson called the replica “pretty special� and said he’ll likely carry both coins this week. “I think they’re kind of cool and it reminds me that I’ve had some success here,� said Mickelson, whose pro debut came in the 1992 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. Two generations later, Phil famously gave Al a signed pin flag from each of his growing stack of TOUR wins, and Al pinned each to the kitchen wall. Their bond comes into high relief at Pebble, and as it happens, Mickelson arrives at his get-well place this week in need of some special mojo. In his 16 starts after Pebble last season, Lefty missed the cut seven times, with a ho-hum T18 at the Masters his best result. He missed the TOUR Championship, again, and, for the first time, the Presidents Cup. Despite boasting a slimmer physique and proclaiming to feel renewed in his energy levels, Mickelson started this season with more of the same: missed cuts at the Safeway Open, The American Express and the Farmers Insurance Open. “I knew that I was playing well,� Mickelson said from last week’s Saudi International, where he finally saw a return to form with a T3 finish, “but it was more of a focus and visualization and some mental things that I needed to strengthen and get stronger.� He is 49, with little left to prove, but seems to be enjoying the battle against undefeated Father Time. He boasts of higher clubhead speed than ever, and his waistline has gone positively retro thanks to regular fasts and his elimination of carbs and sugars. Having won the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship two seasons ago, and at Pebble Beach last year, he need not strain his memory to recall better times. “I would not be surprised if it just came together,� Stuart Appleby said on Golf Channel after Mickelson shot a final-round 67 to finish three behind winner Graeme McDowell in Saudi Arabia. And if it came together? “He would know what to do,� Appleby said. In other words, when you’ve won 44 times on TOUR and find yourself in the hunt again despite missing your last two cuts on TOUR – well, you remember how to close. Especially at Pebble Beach, and especially when you carry that little piece of your roots in your pocket. Does the old silver dollar have a win or two left? As Mickelson might say, you never know.

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Q&A: Miller’s last majorQ&A: Miller’s last major

The unknown teenager from the Continent impressed with a game that was equal parts erratic and electric. The American, known for unmatched iron play that allowed him to rival the great man named Nicklaus, was seeking a second major title to complement a historic victory. These storylines intersected more than four decades ago at Royal Birkdale. It was a year before the famed “Duel in the Sun,” but the 1976 Open Championship also saw two future World Golf Hall of Famers go head-to-head over 36 holes on a links course baked out by an unseasonably warm summer. Johnny Miller and Seve Ballesteros were the two who took center stage in ’76. But unlike Watson vs. Nicklaus, this wasn’t a showdown between longtime rivals that went down to the final hole. The 19-year-old Ballesteros was a new face on the major stage, playing in just his second Open Championship. Miller, on the other hand, was arguably the greatest player on the globe, having won 19 PGA TOUR titles since his win in the 1973 U.S. Open, where he shot the round that would define his career. Not one of those post-Oakmont wins had come in a major, though. Ballesteros was two shots ahead of Miller after two rounds, and maintained that advantage into the final day. The Spaniard’s lead quickly disappeared because of his wayward tee shots and another one of Miller’s stellar final rounds in a major. It wasn’t quite the 63 he produced three years earlier, but Miller’s 66 at Royal Birkdale was the low round of the week. Ballesteros’ final-round 74 dropped him into a tie for second with Jack Nicklaus. They finished six shots behind Miller, who celebrated the United States’ bicentennial by taking the Claret Jug across the Atlantic to the New World. Miller was just 29 years old when he won at Birkdale, but he called the victory the “capper” of his career. The 1976 Open was his final victory in a major, and his last PGA TOUR win for nearly four years. A growing family, and his well-documented putting struggles, kept him out of the winner’s circle until March 1980.    While Miller’s time as one of the game’s elite was coming to an end, Ballesteros’ career was just beginning. He’d win his first Open Championship three years later, eventually claiming the Claret Jug three times and winning the Masters twice. Miller will be back at Birkdale this week to call this year’s Open Championship for NBC/Golf Channel. At 9 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday, Golf Channel will air an hour-long film, entitled “Summer of ‘76â€�, recounting Miller and Ballesteros’ memorable week. He recently spoke to PGATOUR.COM about his victory and the venue for the 2017 Open Championship. (Note: Interview shortened for brevity.) PGATOUR.COM: What should we expect from Royal Birkdale? MILLER: It’s a great piece of property. For years, it didn’t get as much glamour as the Scottish (courses), but actually it’s pretty darned tough. When (Padraig) Harrington won there in 2008, there were only 21 rounds in the 60s all week. You have to play from the fairway, and the fairways are not that wide. If you hit it wild there, it’s pretty tough. That’s what happened to Seve that last round when I beat him. The first hole is one of the hardest opening holes in championship golf. PGATOUR.COM: What stands out when you reflect on your win there? MILLER: My caddie really won it for me. I can’t say that too often. I usually go with my decision. My caddie was a furniture mover from right there in Southport, Ted Halsall. He was a good player, about a 4 handicap, and he was good at reading the greens. He knew all the nuances of the golf course. He played it all the time. They’d been having a drought, and it was running super fast and firm. In fact, it was probably the firmest major championship in modern history. He just said, ‘You’re not going to hit your driver.’ He saw how well I was hitting that Slazenger 1-iron that I had. I can’t remember ever missing a fairway with that 1-iron. It won me the championship because it let my irons finish it off, and my mid- to short-irons were maybe the best in golf at that time.  PGATOUR.COM: Were there any similarities between your 66 at Birkdale and the 63 at Oakmont? MILLER: It was a pretty flawless tee-to-green round. I’ll bet you 90 percent of the tournaments I won I was No. 1 in greens hit that week. That’s just the way I won golf tournaments, by hitting it close enough that a few putts were going to go in. I didn’t do it with great putting. The only really good putting I had was in 1973, ’74 and ’75. Before that it wasn’t too good, and after that it was really not good. By ’76, I was getting yippy enough that I took my wife’s red fingernail polish and put a dot right on the bottom of the grip below my right thumb. When I putted, I would just watch the little red dot go one-two, one-two. PGATOUR.COM: That was your last major, and your last win for four years. What caused you to fall into a slump after winning at Birkdale? MILLER: We had babies in 1970, ’72, ’74 and ’76, so by 1976 — my son, Scott, was born May 12 — I put a really high priority on being home a lot for my young family. And then we had two more kids in ’78 and ’80. If I would have had any brains after that Open, I would have taken at least six months off of the game. I wouldn’t have played the first half of ’77. I had done pretty much all that I wanted, and I wasn’t practicing. I just wanted to be home. It was a great run, but it was a lot of years of hard golf. That one (the 1976 Open Championship) was sort of the capper. I gained 20 pounds of muscle in the fall of 1976, working on that first ranch that I bought. I couldn’t even feel the club. It felt like a pretzel in my hands. I had never had a slump in my life until ’77. I played terribly. I didn’t practice, I didn’t play very many tournaments. I wanted to play a little bit, but I should have taken some time off. That would have quieted my nerves probably a lot. 1976 OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP LEADERBOARD 1. Johnny Miller, 72-68-73-66 (-9) T2. Seve Ballesteros, 69-69-73-74 (-3) T2. Jack Nicklaus, 74-70-72-69 (-3) 4. Raymond Floyd, 76-67-73-70 (-2) PGATOUR.COM: What shot stands out for the week? MILLER: The chip-in for eagle on 15, the par-5, in the final round. That gave me a five-shot lead, and then Seve remembers that I got real friendly after that. He said, ‘He didn’t talk to me for two days and now all of a sudden he’s talking Spanish to me.’ He exaggerated a little, but I knew just a little bit of Spanish from school. Yeah, I can get friendly when I have a five-shot lead with three holes to go. PGATOUR.COM: How familiar were you with Seve before the week? MILLER: I didn’t know who Seve Ballesteros was. Neither did hardly anybody else. He was just a 19-year-old, good-looking guy with a big swing who played super aggressively. You could feel his confidence and feel his determination and his drive and his passion. I know he had a really good hand action down at the bottom of the swing, but he was slightly over the plane when he came down. If he released it, it would go left. And then he would undercut it to the right sometimes. I knew he was a little bit askew with the driver. He didn’t hit them exactly where he was aiming too often. But he was very confident, very proud, and he had a calmness. He was a great putter. He had a big backswing on his putter, and sort of a gliding follow-through, a lot like Ben Crenshaw. Just a real long, smooth, gorgeous putting stroke. You could definitely see he was going to be a super, super player. PGATOUR.COM: Your housemate that week was Sam Snead, who was 64 years old at the time. The Sports Illustrated story from your victory says that he lectured you after the third round, when you slammed your visor to the ground and kicked it in disgust. He told you, ‘You don’t throw your cap to the ground, son. That’s not you. Hit golf shots is what you do best.’ How did you guys end up rooming together? MILLER: That was totally cool. Ed Barner of Uni Managers International had a bunch of players like Grier Jones, Jerry Heard, Jim Simons, Ed Sneed, J.C. Snead, Billy Casper and myself. He was good friends with Sam, being his manager, and so — I can’t believe Sam was even playing in that British Open — it was a hoot staying with him all week.  That was one of the greatest memories of that win, just watching him kick the top of the doorjamb at his age. (Note: Snead was competing to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his win in the 1946 Open Championship. He shot 79-75 and missed the cut in 1976.) PGATOUR.COM: You’ll be at Birkdale this year to commentate on The Open Championship. What do you miss about calling the U.S. Open, and what do you enjoy about your new role? MILLER: As a young boy, my dad just instilled that (the U.S. Open) was going to be the one he was going to work with me towards winning. Everything was groomed towards winning the U.S. Open. There’s a time and a season for everything, and I miss it, but I’m proud that I was given the opportunity to cover our national championship. It’s changed a lot. I grew up with narrow fairways at the U.S. Open and long rough, and honestly it’s been really tough for me to see the changes in the U.S. Open for the last several years. It’s just a more gentle championship off the tee than it used to be. I miss the long rough and I miss the rough around the greens where you had to chop it out. It’s hard for me to see the direction the U.S. Open is going. I guess I’ve just got to get with it and accept it. But I’d like to see it go back to where really accuracy is rewarded, not scrambling. Last year’s Open was probably one of the greatest majors in the history of golf, with Phil shooting 65 and Stenson shooting 63. It was just a great, great day of golf. The history of The Open is one thing, and it really is the world’s championship.

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