
Cameron Young is one of the game's best players, with a PGA Tour victory to his name, several close class in Majors and a US Ryder Cup appearance.
Along the way, he has turned to the expertise of several caddies.
After turning professional in 2019, Young has his good friend Scott McKean on the bag. However, he then turned up to The 150th Open in 2022 with a new bagman, Chad Reynolds, who has worked for Keegan Bradley and Vijay Singh.
That relationship lasted for around eight months, with Young then employing Paul Tesori at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in 2023, an event Young came second in after losing to Sam Burns in the final.
At the end of 2023, Young parted ways with Tesori, as the caddie moved to the bag of multiple-time PGA Tour winner, Brendon Todd.
That left a space open on Young's bag and, in the early part of 2024, the American had Wayne de Haas and former Wake Forest University team-mate Paul McBride caddying for him, before opting for Luke Donald's former caddie, Steve Underwood.

Young made yet another change in 2025, turning to another former Wake Forest University teammate, Kyle Sterbinsky, and that's who he's still working with today.
Sterbinsky linked up with Young at a time when the promising start to his professional career had begun to go backwards.
Unlike Young, Sterbinsky had struggled to make it in professional golf, playing largely on mini tours. Meanwhile, Young had slipped out of the world's top 50, while his maiden PGA Tour win remained elusive.
With neither man pleased with the direction their careers were heading, Young asked Sterbinsky to caddie for him at the Truist Championship.
Young finished tied for seventh at the tournament, so Sterbinsky stayed on.
In the time Sterbinsky has been working with Young, he has enjoyed a significant career resurgence, including victory at the 2025 Wyndham Championship, followed soon after by his maiden Ryder Cup appearance.

The pair's success continued in 2026, including at The Players Championship, where he was in contention going into the final round, suggesting that Sterbinsky could be the man to bring out the full potential of Young, seven years after he turned pro.