PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Days (and likely months) before Cameron Young arrived on the 18th green with a chance to win the Players Championship, new PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp envisioned a grand finale unlike any in tournament history.

“I’m very excited,” Rolapp told NBC Saturday. “We’re going to drop the ropes on 18 when the final group comes up so the fans can actually experience that championship moment with the leader, and hopefully, with the eventual champion. It’s a tradition I’ve heard a lot of fans want back, so we’re going to do it this weekend.”

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It was only fitting that Rolapp’s dream of a winner’s spotlight was foiled by Young — a character whose very essence repels the spotlight like a cockroach to a high beam. If Rolapp were to choose the antithesis of a star golfer under the Tour’s new high-flying vision of consequence, significance and showmanship, Young might be the golfer he drew — a low-key, low-profile introvert who treats fame with a wariness bordering on neurosis.

Young, after all, is the golfer whose press conference was briefly interrupted on Friday afternoon when he spoke so quietly that reporters standing less than five feet in front of him could not make out his answer. He is the golfer who wouldn’t dare attend (or worse, pontificate upon) Rolapp’s porcelein state-of-the-state presser from PGA Tour headquarters on Wednesday. And he is the golfer who could be found repeatedly at TPC Sawgrass in one of the places PGA Tour players are loath to visit: The large hill to the aft side of the course’s enormous clubhouse, where he spent time after multiple rounds chasing after his three children (two boys and girl) in endless pursuit of a large rubber golf ball.

So who better to claim the title in Rolapp’s first go-around at the biggest event of the Tour season than Young? And how better for Young to capture the biggest win of his life than in the penultimate group, in a tournament he did not lead until his ball found the bottom of the 72nd hole, and with a reaction that evoked less of Rory McIlroy’s jubilant exhale on the 18th at Augusta National and more of Rory McIlroy’s otherwise pedestrian par on the last at TPC Sawgrass more than four hours before the leaders appeared on the closing stretch?

“I was really, really good until I had to make the eight-inch putt on the last hole, and I just about fell apart,” Young said with a grin after it was over. “I couldn’t get my line to point anywhere near the hole, and I went and hit it anyway, which maybe I shouldn’t have. But it went in, so all is well.”

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And indeed it is all well. Without pomp and circumstance. With no grand coronation. And even with a bit of a surprise from the NBC broadcast crew, which scurried to set the scene for his victory on the 18th after spending much of the afternoon preparing to anoint the tournament’s other two contenders, Matthew Fitzpatrick or 54-hole leader Ludvig Aberg.

And yet it was all oddly perfect. Sunday the Players Championship was better than most could have imagined when the day began with Aberg as a three-shot leader and an unheralded group of chasers — and Young was a better champion than anyone at Tour HQ could have fathomed to start the week … and for none of the reasons they imagined.

“I mean, I love my life, I love my family, I love my job,” Young said Sunday, capturing the essence of his appeal to regular golf fans with trademark brevity. “I couldn’t ask for much more.”

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