The Road to Richmond
Two opens in, Brotherhood Cornhole has already made one thing clear: this isn’t a rebuild year — it’s a takeover tour.
From Rock Hill’s fireworks to Winter Haven’s podium storm, this team’s been stacking results like receipts.
Now the road turns toward Richmond, Virginia, where the lights are colder, the crowds louder, and the air smells faintly of adrenaline and barbecue.
This isn’t just another stop.
It’s the first test of momentum.
Tony Forbes & Spencer Fabionar: The Heat Check
There’s something dangerous about two players who’ve stopped talking about chemistry and just started finishing each other’s throws.
That’s Tony Forbes and Spencer Fabionar right now.
Rock Hill was the spark. Winter Haven was the ignition.
They’ve gone from partners to a two-man machine — rhythm, confidence, and just enough swagger to make the bracket nervous.
Tony’s still the technician, all precision and quiet drive.
Spencer? The flashpoint. Bags drop, score climbs, and you get the sense he’s still not close to his ceiling.
They already have hardware. Now they want the habit of winning.
Colin Hodet & Gage Landis: The Silent Problem
Colin Hodet and Gage Landis are that duo nobody wants to draw. They don’t talk much, they don’t posture — they just bury you one bag at a time.
Colin’s the chess player — steady, surgical, completely unshaken.
Gage is the metronome — smooth release, quiet killer energy.
They’ve been flirting with perfection since Rock Hill. Richmond could be the weekend they cash it in.
Trevor Herbst & Brayden Lockwood: The New Energy
Fresh blood, same fire.
Trevor Herbst and Brayden Lockwood bring raw energy to the lineup — the kind that makes the veterans straighten up and pay attention.
They throw fearless. They throw fast. And they throw like they don’t care who’s on the other side of the board.
Every great season needs a pair of wildcards. These two are the spark in the powder keg.
Keyara Peterson & Mailyn Dela Cruz Gigante: The Calm and the Storm
Keyara Peterson and Mailyn Dela Cruz Gigante are back, locked in, and carrying serious momentum out of Battle of the Queens and Winter Haven.
Keyara’s the surgeon — deliberate, balanced, impossible to shake.
Mailyn’s the firebrand — emotion, instinct, and laser focus when it matters most.
They’ve found the rhythm, the confidence, and the edge.
Richmond’s the stage — now it’s time to see how loud they can make it.
Madison Collins: The Anchor
When the lights come up and the noise hits, Madison Collins doesn’t flinch.
She plays steady, stays connected, and reminds everyone what composure looks like under pressure.
Madison isn’t chasing attention — she creates it by being exactly what every team needs: reliable, focused, and impossible to ignore.
Every team has glue players. Madison is cement.
Donald Cupp: The Veteran Hand
Donald Cupp just joined the Brotherhood Cornhole roster and already brought home hardware — first in Senior Open Doubles with Steve Schroeder in Winter Haven.
Now he’s back on the road, bringing veteran poise to a roster already thick with confidence.
He throws like someone who’s seen everything once — and that makes him dangerous when everything’s on the line.
Mike Miller & Brayton English: Experience, Measured and Sharp
In a sport full of chaos, Mike Miller and Brayton English are the eye of the storm.
They don’t overthink, they don’t overreact — they just execute.
Their second-place Senior finish in Rock Hill wasn’t luck. It was discipline.
And in Richmond, they’re ready to prove it again.
Together, they give Brotherhood Cornhole a foundation — precision, patience, and a quiet belief that consistency still wins championships.
Frank Verona Jr.: The International Threat
While the team was baking in Florida heat, Frank Verona Jr. was freezing out the field in Quebec — and winning everything in sight.
Singles champion. Doubles champion.
That kind of dominance doesn’t fade; it follows you.
Now he’s bringing that same Canadian cold-blooded precision to Richmond, and if the rest of the field isn’t ready, they’re about to find out how efficient victory can look.
Frank doesn’t play loud — he plays final.
Asher Plummer: The Kid Who Keeps Showing Up
The youngest player on the roster, Asher Plummer, has been playing like he doesn’t know he’s supposed to have growing pains.
Junior champ in Rock Hill, confident everywhere he goes.
He’s not the future — he’s the present. And if Richmond has a surprise in store, odds are it’s coming from him.
The Pulse
The boards are ready, the roster’s deep, and the momentum’s real.
Richmond’s about to get a full dose of Brotherhood Cornhole — from veterans to rising stars, every lane, every bracket, every division.
Somewhere between the last throw and the last word, there’s something hidden for the people paying attention — maybe it’s dead center, maybe it’s not.
There’s no secret formula here. Just skill, sweat, and a season that’s starting to feel like a statement.
BROTHERHOOD CORNHOLE
Performance. Family. Grit.
Follow the team this season → @BrotherhoodCornhole
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