Cameron Young Wife, Kelsey Dalition, Guides Home Life for Three Kids

Cameron Young Wife, Kelsey Dalition, Guides Home Life for Three Kids

Cameron Young wife Kelsey Dalition Young is part of a home routine built around three children under the age of five, and the PGA Tour golfer says he deleted Instagram because it was better for his mind. The family setup gives a tighter read on how he balances life at home with the demands of tour golf.

March 15 and The Players

March 15 brought one of Young’s clearest public acknowledgments of that balance, when he said, “None of this is possible without my wife, Kelsey and my family,” in an interview posted by the PGA Tour. After winning The Players in March, he credited Dalition for helping him chase his dreams, and he said she works incredibly hard on all of their behalf.

“I mean, it’s constant. They travel all the time. So she holds up that part of it at home and does it all on my behalf, so I can go do my job and chase my dreams,” Young said. That is the practical load behind the result on the course: one partner traveling, the other keeping the home side moving.

Three Kids Under Five

“We have three kids, and some of the guys around my age are having their first or having a second,” Young said in a Town & Country interview published April 9, 2026. He added, “For us, if I ever get to have one of our kids at a time, it’s a huge treat. They’re all amazing individually, and it’s only when they’re all together that it sometimes feels overwhelming.”

After the kids go to sleep, he said, “it’s me and my wife downstairs cleaning up after the day,” and that he has tried to enjoy that time as much as he can because “it is fleeting.” The detail cuts against the polished tour image: his off-course life is not built around visibility, but around a small daily routine that has to work night after night.

Instagram and Quieted Mind

Young told the same interviewer that deleting Instagram freed up time and headspace. “So for me, I felt like if it took me away from other things I could be doing for half an hour or an hour or two hours a day, I just felt like my time could be better spent elsewhere,” he said, adding, “And getting rid of it all together, ultimately, quieted my mind.”

He also said, “It’s not a part of my life,” while acknowledging, “I’m grateful for that because I understand it’s where a lot of the culture happens, but it’s also not always positive.” Young said he had gotten “one too many negative messages” and spent too much time on it before deciding he would be better without it and would not “even open the door to any of that anymore.”

For readers tracking Young’s public profile, the takeaway is simple: his family life is now the bigger story than his online presence, and he has already acted on that choice. The next meaningful update is likely to come from the course, where the way he manages the demands of travel, parenting, and attention will keep showing up in his results.

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