
On Sunday at the 2026 Players Championship, Matt Fitzpatrick suffered the most devastating defeat of his pro golf career. But you wouldn’t know it if you watched Fitzpatrick closely in the immediate aftermath of his stinging loss at TPC Sawgrass.
The 2022 U.S. Open champion made bogey on the 18th hole, the Stadium Course’s watery finisher, to surrender the Players title to Cameron Young, all while being heckled by American fans in a decidedly “partisan” crowd on Sunday.
But instead of curtly shaking Young’s hand and bee-lining for his courtesy car to head home, Fitzpatrick displayed an admirable level of genuine professionalism and respect that should serve him well as he mounts his comeback to the elite echelons of golf.
Fitzpatrick congratulates Young’s family after gutting loss: ‘I love Cam’
Let’s be clear: this loss was huge for Fitzpatrick. Admittedly, it would have stung more if he had not won the 2022 U.S. Open at the Country Club, where he also won the 2013 U.S. Amateur.
But a Players win on Sunday would have unquestionably been the second-biggest victory of his pro career. After years of on-course struggles, it would have also represented his first PGA Tour victory since 2023.
Cam Young’s Players Championship moment was perfectly awkward
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But as soon as Young tapped in his winning putt Sunday night, Fitzpatrick put his own self-pity aside and turned his focus to genuinely congratulating Young and his family.
The first person to greet Young right after his winning putt? It wasn’t his caddie. It was Fitzpatrick. Young had bit of a deer-in-the-headlights look to him in his post-winning moment, until his opponent broke the ice.
Fitzpatrick got Young’s attention and then, with a wide smile splashed across his face, gave Young a big hug and offered his immediate congratulations.
“I love Cam,” Fitzpatrick said in his post-round press conference Sunday at the Players. “He’s such a nice guy. He’s so laid back; it’s so nice. Always knew we were going to have a good day today, just obviously both comfortable around each other, and it was.”
Now, Fitzpatrick and Young are TGL teammates, both members of the New York Golf Club. But more importantly, they are Ryder Cup opponents, fresh off an especially testy European win last year at Bethpage Black, in Young’s home state of New York.
In light of that, any hostility between the two would be understandable. But Fitzpatrick displayed the opposite Sunday night at the Players Championship.
If hugging Young after his win wasn’t enough evidence of that, what Fitzpatrick did next should be.
While heading off the 18th green to the scorer’s tent to officially sign off on his loss, Fitzpatrick went out of his way to find Young’s family.
He walked over and congratulated Young’s wife, Kelsey, and kids. Then he shook the hand of Young dad’s, PGA professional David Young, before hugging Young’s mom, Barbara Young.
Having experienced an even bigger win himself at Brookline in 2022, Fitzpatrick knew well how much this win meant to Young’s family. If the Youngs weren’t already Matt Fitzpatrick fans, they are now.
Matt Fitzpatrick to Players hecklers: ‘That was literally child’s play’
About that Ryder Cup rivalry. Given that Fitzpatrick played on the victorious 2025 European Ryder Cup team and Young starred on the American team, Sunday’s final holes had a decidedly Ryder Cup feel to them.
As it became clear that playing partners Fitzpatrick and Young would be battling one-on-one for the title over the final few holes, fans started showering Young with “USA” chants that could be heard on the TV broadcast.
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Fitzpatrick, on the other hand, was regularly showered with boos from American hecklers outside the ropes.
In a Golf Channel interview following his win, Young revealed that on the final hole, Fitzpatrick even joked with him about the hostile atmosphere.
“It was to the point that Matt looked to me on 18 and said, ‘Cam, do you hate me, too?’”
But Fitzpatrick wasn’t bothered by it, acknowledging his own press conference that he’d experienced something similar when playing with former American Ryder Cupper Jordan Spieth at the 2023 Players Championship.
He then referred to the heckles he received at TPC Sawgrass as “child’s play” compared to what he and his teammates experienced last September at Bethpage.
“Listen, the crowd, that was literally child’s play compared to Bethpage. If they think that that was anything, then they need to reassess. Get yourself up to New York,” Fitzpatrick said. “Listen, that’s how it is. That’s how it is. I would hope it’s the exact same if — well, it probably wouldn’t be because we’re a little bit more polite in Europe, I would say, but I would hope it would be of similar intensity in Europe.”
But there’s another explanation for Fitzpatrick’s positivity following his loss at the Players. Beyond earning him $2.725 million, Fitzpatrick’s runner-up finish is his best on the PGA Tour since 2023.
After years in the swing wilderness, Fitzpatrick, who also won the DP World Tour Championship in November, is rounding into form. He had a top-10 at the WM Phoenix Open last month and hasn’t missed a cut yet this year.
That means both Fitzpatrick and Young, who is on quite a tear himself, are playing their best with the biggest tournament of the year just weeks away: the 2026 Masters at Augusta National.