There will be a day when Cameron Young can look back at what happened on the 15th hole on Saturday afternoon at the Plantation Course and laugh a little bit about what transpired. Mind you, that day probably won’t come until the Sentry Tournament of Champions is over, and the pain of the moment feels less fresh. But the 25-year-old has the sense of humour where he’ll ultimately enjoy the fact that a misjudged putt made him the most relateable tour pro of the day for those watching the scene from beautiful Maui unfold on TV.

Young, the reigning PGA Tour rookie of the year pro everybody wanted to partner with on the American side at last September’s Presidents Cup, was at 10-under for the tournament, four-under on the afternoon and just six shots off the lead, when he hit the green on the par 5 in two, leaving himself a 56-foot putt for eagle. As the microphones picked up, however, Young’s next shot was tricky in that it was a downhill, down grain putt with the potential to wander if it wasn’t handled with care.

And wander it did, as you can see with this video:

At one point as the ball approached the hole, it looked like Young played it too far to the right, but then suddenly it darted to the left. But not enough and not without too much speed as it also rushed past the hole and wasn’t close to stopping on the fringe of the green.

When the ball finally came to rest down a hill fronting the green, it was now just shy of 151 feet from the hole, having rolled more than 200 feet.

If the eagle putt was tricky, Young’s chip for birdie wasn’t any easier as he now was facing an uphill shot into the grain that had potential to land short and roll back off the green. Which, unfortunately for Young, is just what happened.

“Wow,” TV analyst Paul Azinger said as things unfolded. “That … really it’s like a jolt to your system when something like that happens to you as a player. It’s embarrassing and you have a blood rush from that one.”

For his fifth shot, Young played a pitch shot hard and low, hitting it 12 feet past the hole, the ball rolling back to six feet. He holed that putt for a bogey 6. He’d finish his round birdie, bogey, birdie to post a four-under 69, but as leader Collin Morikawa pulled away later in the day with a Saturday 65, Young wound ending the third round 14 shots off the pace.