by Brent Loghry

Brotherhood Cornhole Shines at the Rock Hill Open

The boards were fast, the lights were bright, and Brotherhood Cornh...
Brotherhood Cornhole Shines at the Rock Hill Open

Spencer Fabionar: Making a Statement Early

Spencer Fabionar doesn’t warm up — he shows up already mid-swing.

Friday’s Blind Draw? He pulled Hayden Gonzales as a partner and went 7–0 without blinking. First place. A perfect run with Brotherhood Guardian X’s and a clean 10.0 PPR. That’s not “in form.” That’s “I’ve been waiting all offseason for this.”

Saturday’s Doubles with Tony Forbes was the kind of roller coaster that ends with fireworks.
They went 4–2 in Rounders to reach Tier 1, then stormed through the bracket to finish 2nd. Spencer threw Guardian XRs all day, hitting a 10.56 PPR that most people would frame if it were theirs.

Sunday? Same story, different setting.
He started 5–0 in Singles, found his way to the championship match, and finished 2nd in bracket with a 10.28 PPR.

Three days, three podiums, three warning shots to the rest of the ACL field.
Spencer Fabionar didn’t just arrive — he brought receipts.

Spencer Fabionar and Hayden Gonzales Rock Hill Open Blind Draw win


Richard Nyberg & Collin Powers: The Debut

Two names that sound like they belong on a law firm door.
Richard Nyberg and Collin Powers made their doubles debut and turned heads doing it.

Crew Cup? Richard teamed with Donovan Cinelli, Donovan Vasquez, and Hunter Thorson, finishing 5th — because of course he did. That’s just his warm-up act.

Then came Doubles — their first event as a pro duo. They fought through Rounders, adjusted on the fly, and still finished T-5th in their bracket. It wasn’t perfect, but it was proof.
You could see the chemistry building, one throw at a time.

In Singles, both started 3–0, then hit the same wall and finished tied for 9th. That’s the kind of ending that doesn’t sting — it simmers.
Both threw Brotherhood Guardian bags, and both looked like they’d be dangerous once everything clicks.

And it’s going to click. Soon.

Richard Nyberg with fans


Gage Landis: The Momentum Builder

Gage Landis started quiet and finished like a freight train.

He dropped his first Singles match — then decided that was enough losing for the weekend.
Seven straight wins later, he finally bowed out to Gavin, but not before proving that his Brotherhood Guardian H’s were doing exactly what they were built to do.

He and Colin Hodet also locked in for Doubles, taking 3rd in their bracket, showing flashes of something bigger down the road.
Next stop: Winter Haven, with more confidence and a partner who matches his rhythm.


Colin Hodet: Calm, Calculated, Dangerous

Colin Hodet is the guy who never looks rattled — which is confusing until you realize he’s not.

Crew Cup? 1st place with Logan Chamberlain, Gavin Cano, and Austin Waskow.
Then he goes and wins the Carolina Panthers Charity Event with Owen Merrill, snagging King Seat honors and a pair of on-field tickets for the trouble.

Saturday Doubles? He and Gage Landis finished 3rd in bracket, another solid result that reads like a prelude to something louder.
Singles? 4–2 for 5th overall.

He mixed Guardian H’s and Guardian XRs throughout the weekend, throwing them like they were extensions of his own arm.
Colin doesn’t talk about momentum — he just builds it, brick by brick.

Colin Hodet throwing at Rock Hill Open


Asher Plummer: The Young Gun

The future showed up early.

Asher Plummer and Brayden Barry took 1st place in Junior Doubles, because apparently, patience is for other people.
They threw with precision, poise, and the kind of confidence that makes you double-check their age.

The next generation of Brotherhood isn’t “up next.” They’re already here.

Asher Plummer wins High School Doubles


Mike Miller & Brayton English: Steady Hands in the Storm

Some players throw for the crowd.
Mike Miller and Brayton English throw for the scoreboard.

They carved their way through the Senior Division, finishing 2nd overall, proving that Brotherhood doesn’t just show up in the pro lanes — it runs deep across every division.
Call them veterans, call them anchors, call them what they are: consistent winners.

Brayton English and Mike Miller take 2nd at Rock Hill


Brotherhood Pride & Gratitude

Every weekend like this has a foundation — a roster of sponsors and supporters who make it possible for Brotherhood players to keep breaking expectations and throwing heat.

PlayerSponsors and Partners:
G&M Automotive Center
Shot Kings Cornhole
All The Hype Cornhole
Blast Adult Fun Sports Complex
Efficacy IT, LLC
Solar Installers Near Me LLC
MASON DIXON Cornhole (Hagerstown, MD)
Rosenberry Lending Team – APM
Cove Cornhole
Morrow’s Vacation Properties
Temperature Matters LLC
Double Dipped Cornhole
TWT
Cornhole Coffee
Martinizing Cleaners
Drip Kulture
BAG SZN Cornhole
Sac City Cornhole
Stickside Cornhole
WEM Designs, Vermont Handcrafted Jewelry
Mosaic Salon (Tabitha Fuller)
Culver’s
Jim Kallio Photos

These are the people who fuel the season, the ones behind the quiet moments that turn into highlight reels.


Next Stop: Winter Haven

The Brotherhood squad rolls into Winter Haven, Florida with momentum, confidence, and that unmistakable mix of focus and swagger.

The first Open is done. The tone is set.
And if Rock Hill was the statement, Winter Haven is the echo.


BROTHERHOOD CORNHOLE
Performance. Family. Grit.
Follow the season → @BrotherhoodCornhole

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