One Membership. Four Times the Value.

InsideGOLF Premium
News

‘Only guy that knew it:’ PGA Tour leader stunningly blows rules whistle on himself

Cameron Young

Cameron Young, right, on Sunday on the 2nd hole at Trump National Doral.

Getty Images

Cameron Young, in the end, lost no ground. 

He may have also picked up a few followers. 

What unfolded before that was theater during Sunday’s final round of the PGA Tour’s Cadillac Championship. On his second shot on the second hole at Trump National Doral, Young placed his iron behind his ball, took his iron just over halfway back, then paused, then looked at his ball. He said it moved slightly forward. 

Young called for an official. In question was what moved the ball. Could it have been Young? Could it have been something else? Young was also leading by five. The official arrived, and Golf Channel mics picked up Young telling him that he didn’t know “for sure” whether he had caused the ball to move, before saying that he touched the grass and the ball rolled. The official told him he would be assessed a one-shot penalty. Young also asked for a video review, and the infraction wasn’t changed.  

In play in this scenario was rule 9.2b (2) of the Rules of Golf, which reads this way:

“The player, the opponent or an outside influence is treated as having caused the ball to move only if it is known or virtually certain to be the cause. If it is not known or virtually certain that at least one of these was the cause, the ball is treated as having been moved by natural forces. In applying this standard, all reasonably available information must be considered, which means all information the player knows or can get with reasonable effort and without unreasonably delaying play.”

And what does “known or virtually certain” mean? The Rules of Golf say this: “Known or virtually certain means more than just possible or probable. It means that either there is conclusive evidence that the event in question happened to the player’s ball, such as when the player or other witnesses saw it happen; or although there is a very small degree of doubt, all reasonably available information shows that it is at least 95 percent likely that the event in question happened.”

On the Golf Channel broadcast, announcer Steve Sands and analysts Smylie Kaufman and Curt Byrum said this:

Said Kaufman: “Most players in that situation will protect the field. And being able to sleep at night.” 

Said Sands: “But he said: ‘I wasn’t sure.’” 

Said Byrum: “By placing the club behind the ball, he wasn’t sure that’s what made the ball move or not. But … if you’re going to err on the side of caution, you’d have to call the penalty on yourself.” 

Said Kaufman: “I think you have to. Any time you put your club behind the golf ball and the ball moves and you touch the ground, you have to assume that’s what it was.”

Of course, Young could have also said nothing about the ball movement, a thought that wasn’t lost on on-course analyst Roger Maltbie. 

“Makes you proud to be a golfer,” he said on Golf Channel. “He’s the only guy that knew it. I think that’s very impressive.”

As was what followed. 

Young hit his third stroke to 13 feet. 

Then made the par putt.   

And his lead stayed at five. 

Related Articles

Gear
Chris Gotterup's Bridgestone irons are a rarity. Here's what else is cool about his setup
By: Jack Hirsh
News
2026 Open Championship Thursday tee times: Round 1 groupings
By: Kevin Cunningham
Putters
Tom Kim's move back to Scotty Cameron blade putter proves worth it
By: Jack Hirsh
News
Why the week's most relatable golfer was not a club-throwing Charles Barkley
By: Josh Sens
Gear
Tom Kim's clubs: Scottish Open provides rare blade putter win
By: Jack Hirsh
News
Tom Kim's drought-snapping Scottish Open win ended with Tiger Woods text
By: Josh Sens
News
A wayward shot stopped Rory McIlroy's Scottish Open charge. Then came 5 words
By: Josh Schrock
News
The Scottish Open is special. How long can it stay that way?
By: Sean Zak
News
2026 Genesis Scottish Open Sunday TV coverage: How to watch Round 4
By: Kevin Cunningham
was:
Exit mobile version