DORAL, Fla. — Cameron Young made, by his own count, “about a billion feet worth of putts.” Jordan Spieth was, to use his own word, a “nerd.”
Both approaches paid off in the opening round of the Cadillac Championship.
Young shot a bogey-free 8-under 64 on Thursday, taking a one-shot lead over Spieth and Alex Smalley at Trump International Doral to open the $20 million signature event — the first PGA Tour stop at the course in 10 years.
“I think you can be pretty aggressive into a lot of the greens,” Young said. “They’re not particularly firm. I feel like the ball’s sitting when you need it to. So, it’s more just about avoiding some of the big mistakes. There’s a couple spots where the rough’s a little longer and obviously there’s tons of water out there.”
Young’s putter was the story of his round — about 98 feet worth of putts made, to be exact. His day got rolling with barely any putt at all when he stuck his approach from 154 yards to about an inch on the par-4 second. He went on to drain three birdie putts from 25 feet or more before the day was done.
“I feel like I made a billion feet of putts, which I think works most places,” Young said. “It’s just one of those days that each mistake I made I was not penalized as much as I could have been. And every time my ball got near the hole it seemed to want to go in today.”
Spieth chipped in for eagle on the par-5 eighth hole and survived a pair of bogeys on the back nine. He relied on notes he took during Wednesday’s pro-am — “nerdy stuff,” he called it — and generally stayed in control of his round.
“I didn’t love some of the swings I made,” Spieth said. “But I was able to kind of put them in the right spot and I made some really good swings as well.”
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler had a different take after his opening round.
He made three birdies in the first five holes, then didn’t get another the rest of the day. Back-to-back bogeys on Nos. 10 and 11 dropped him to 1 under, and that’s where he stayed. A highlight might have been his par save on the par-4 14th after he sprayed a driver way right and had the club come out of his hands on the follow-through.
It’s the sixth time in his last eight starts that Scheffler — who, to be fair, almost always finds a way to contend — has been no better than 20th after an opening round.
“I just wasn’t capitalizing on a lot of stuff today,” Scheffler said. “Felt like I could have holed a few more putts. Couple more fairways. Felt like when I got a touch off I wasn’t able to get it back and didn’t really steal any shots today.”
Nick Taylor (66) sits in fourth, two shots off Young’s lead, while Nico Echavarria — winner of the Cognizant Classic at PGA National earlier this year — is three shots back after an opening-round 67.
Most of this week’s field is playing Doral for the first time, at least as pros. The course held LIV Golf events from 2022 through 2025, but the PGA Tour stopped using the course — a longtime highlight of the Florida Swing — when President Donald Trump bought the facility.
Adam Scott was the most recent PGA Tour winner at Doral, prevailing in the World Golf Championship-Cadillac Championship in 2016. He shot a 76 on Thursday, two shots worse than Justin Rose — a winner at Doral in 2012.
Young proved to be a quick study on the Blue Monster.
“I think most of the tee shots are pretty apparent, which is what good courses give you,” Young said. “I think it doesn’t try to hide anything. So, learning the course wasn’t a huge deal, I wouldn’t say.”





