Zone Cornhole Club

Zone Cornhole Club Co****le club in Walworth, NY. Tournaments, benefits, and weekly leagues. ACL directors. Most importantly, we want everyone to have fun! Ask us for details.

Our mission is to host well organized co****le events on high quality equipment to grow the sport. We offer a club membership, but you do not need to be a member to play in our events.

06/07/2026
Our May regional was Sunday, May 31 at Rootstock Cider & Spirits. We had a blast with everyone there. We had players who...
06/06/2026

Our May regional was Sunday, May 31 at Rootstock Cider & Spirits. We had a blast with everyone there. We had players who were new to the American Co****le League, many regulars, and several players who are in the top 25 ACL standings.

First up was an early bird sit-n-go (single elimination blind draw) at 9:15 am. Kayden Blencowe and Tom Wheaton took top spot.

At 10 am we started two tiers of doubles rounders for ACL local points and to warm up. Immediately after rounders, double elimination brackets started.
Tier 1: Kayden Blencowe and Justin Hendrickson
Tier 3: Alexis Holmqiust and Carla Mann

While doubles was winding down, we held the second sit-n-go of the day and a bag raffle for a set of Co****le Scenario bags.
Sit-N-Go #2: Jacky White and Anthony Motherwell
Bag Raffle: Ken McConnell (of course he chose the orange ones!)

Immediately after doubles we jumped into singles double elimination brackets.
Tier 1: Shane Maier
Tier 3: Bryan Herrmann
Tier 4: John T***e

All tiers and sit-n-go recaps have their own posts. Check them out for all the details.

Congratulations to all the players on the podiums. Thank you to the players for joining us on this ACL journey. We couldn't do this without our home venue Rootstock and our sponsors.

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🏆 Zone Regional  #7 – Tier 3 Singles Recaphttps://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248805/type/bracket🥇 1st Place: Bryan Her...
06/06/2026

🏆 Zone Regional #7 – Tier 3 Singles Recap
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248805/type/bracket

🥇 1st Place: Bryan Herrmann
This was less a straight path and more a full endurance test with a dramatic ending.

Dropped early but responded with a long lower‑bracket run.

Then reached the final and beat Kyle Demo twice, because brackets have rules and Bryan chose to follow all of them.

Statistically:
8.12 PPR with a +0.34 DPR
89 rounds played, which is less a stat and more a commitment

👉 Summary: Took the longest route possible, made it work anyway, and refused to lose when it mattered most.

🥈 2nd Place: Kyle Demo
A very efficient run… until the final required winning twice.

Started strong, reached the final undefeated, then ran into a player who had already been warmed up for approximately forever.

Stat line:
8.04 PPR with the best DPR in the field (+0.42)
Event-high 9 four baggers

👉 Summary: Dominated efficiently, then discovered the downside of facing someone with bonus momentum and extra reps.

🥉 3rd Place: Joey Ouimet
A strong winner’s bracket run that held up until it didn’t.

Highlight win: 22 to 13 over Cory White
Took down Bryan Herrmann once… which unfortunately meant seeing him again later.
Eventually eliminated in the late rounds after a solid overall performance.

Statistically:
8.08 PPR across 53 rounds

👉 Summary: Beat good players, played well throughout, and learned that beating someone once is sometimes not enough.

📊 Stat Leaders
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)
1 J.J. Mann 8.13
2 Bryan Herrmann 8.12
3 Joey Ouimet 8.08
4 Kyle Demo 8.04
5 Cory White 8.0

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)
1 Kyle Demo 0.42
2 Bryan Herrmann 0.34
3 J.J. Mann -0.09
4 Joey Ouimet -0.13
5 Cory White -0.55

🎯 Bags In Percentage
1 J.J. Mann 57.78
2 Cory White 56.03
3 Joey Ouimet 55.19
4 Bryan Herrmann 54.49
5 Kyle Demo 54.35

💥 Total 4 Baggers
1 Kyle Demo 9
2 J.J. Mann 6
2 Bryan Herrmann 6
4 Joey Ouimet 5
5 Cory White 2

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage
1 J.J. Mann 13.33
2 Kyle Demo 13.04
3 Joey Ouimet 9.43
4 Herman Colon 8.7
5 Cory White 6.9

🏃 Most Rounds Played
1 Bryan Herrmann 89
2 Kyle Demo 69
3 Joey Ouimet 53
4 J.J. Mann 45
5 Cory White 29

🧺 Total Bags Thrown
1 Bryan Herrmann 356
2 Kyle Demo 276
3 Joey Ouimet 212
4 J.J. Mann 180
5 Cory White 116

🧾 Final Thoughts

Bryan Herrmann proved that the longest path is still valid, especially if you win twice at the end.
Kyle Demo showed that cruising through the winner’s bracket is great—right up until someone makes you do it again.
Joey Ouimet demonstrated that beating someone once is helpful, but not always permanent.

👉 Final takeaway:
Win early if you can.
If not, play everyone, win late, and bring enough energy to win twice when it counts.

06/06/2026

🏆 Zone Regional #7 Sit‑N‑Go Recaps

Sit-N-Go #1
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/246346/type/bracket
A classic bracket where bags were tossed, dreams were shaped, and a few scorelines politely ignored.

🥇 1st Place: Kayden Blencowe & Tom Wheaton
Efficiency met inevitability here. Kayden Blencowe & Tom Wheaton navigated the bracket like they had already read the script. After surviving early rounds, they absolutely slammed the door in the final with a 22–17 win over a very respectable opponent.

Kayden quietly dominated statistically, leading the entire field in multiple categories.
Tom played the perfect co-pilot role, steady and reliable when it counted.

In short: one player caught fire, the other made sure the fire didn’t spread out of control. Championship secured.

🥈 2nd Place: Scott Desens & Ben Galstian
A team that clearly enjoys playing a lot of co****le—and it showed.

They battled through multiple matches (and more rounds than anyone else) to reach the final.
Ben Galstian in particular posted strong numbers across nearly every category.
Scott Desens embraced the grind, even if the stats occasionally looked like they needed ice packs.

They ran into a hotter team at the wrong time, but second place here was well-earned through volume, resilience, and probably mild exhaustion.

🥉 3rd Place: Herman Colon & Ken McConnell
This duo fought their way into the late rounds with solid, consistent play.

Ken McConnell delivered a strong all-around statistical performance.
Herman Colon contributed steady production and helped push the team into contention.

They didn’t quite break through to the final, but they were competitive throughout and earned their spot on the podium without needing dramatic theatrics.

📊 Stat Leaders (Top 5)
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)

Kayden Blencowe 10.5
Justin Hendrickson 10.33
Jacob Frey 10
Timothy Young 9.82
Ben Galstian 9.57

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)

Kayden Blencowe 1.8
Ben Galstian 1.7
Jacob Frey 1.5
Ken McConnell 1.19
Zach Spencer 0.64

🎯 Bags In Percentage

Kayden Blencowe 81.25%
Justin Hendrickson 79.17%
Jacob Frey 79.17%
Timothy Young 75%
Ben Galstian 72.83%

💥 Total 4 Baggers

Kayden Blencowe 10
Ben Galstian 8
Timothy Young 4
Tom Wheaton 4
Jacob Frey 3

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage

Kayden Blencowe 50%
Jacob Frey 50%
Timothy Young 36.36%
Ben Galstian 34.78%
Justin Hendrickson 33.33%

🏃 Most Rounds Played

Scott Desens 24
Ben Galstian 23
Kayden Blencowe 20
Tom Wheaton 19
Ken McConnell 16

🧺 Total Bags Thrown

Scott Desens 96
Ben Galstian 92
Kayden Blencowe 80
Tom Wheaton 76
Ken McConnell 64

🧾 Final Thoughts

Kayden Blencowe was the statistical centerpiece—efficient, accurate, and just annoying enough for opponents to remember.
Tom Wheaton supported the championship effort perfectly without needing to dominate headlines.
The runner-up team proved that if you play enough rounds, you’ll eventually become very good—or at least very familiar with the scoring system.

Sit‑N‑Go #2 Recap
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248803/type/bracket
A compact bracket, a handful of teams, and just enough chaos to keep things interesting without anyone needing a nap mid‑tournament.

🥇 1st Place: Jacky White & Anthony Mothersell
This team took a very practical approach to the bracket:
Start strong, keep scoring, and avoid letting games get close enough to require deep thought.

Opened with a win over Desens/Buck—efficient and slightly discouraging for the opposition.
Followed that with a 24 to 2 result in the semifinal, which removed most suspense by about round two.
Closed things out with a 23 to 8 win in the final, leaving little doubt about how things were going to end.

Statistically:
Jacky White delivered strong volume scoring (9.05 PPR across 20 rounds).
Anthony Mothersell quietly posted a massive 2.25 DPR, meaning when he scored, it tended to come with a side of damage.

👉 Summary: Efficient, decisive, and not especially interested in close finishes.

🥈 2nd Place: Ben Galstian & Jordan Matlock
A solid run that included some strong wins… followed by a final that went differently than planned.

Advanced through a tight semifinal. Reached the championship and were promptly introduced to a 15‑point margin.

Individually:
Ben Galstian posted one of the best overall stat lines in the event (9.06 PPR over 18 rounds).
Jordan Matlock contributed steady volume, even if efficiency trailed slightly.

👉 Summary: Strong path to the final, unfortunate timing for running into a team that had already decided how the game would go.

🥉 3rd Place: Ken McConnell & Zach Spencer
This team hovered right on the edge of a finals appearance, which is both encouraging and mildly frustrating.

Pulled off a 22 to 20 win in their opener—always a good way to test your blood pressure early.
Fell in a very tight 21 to 19 semifinal, just missing a trip to the championship.

Stat highlights:
Ken McConnell was one of the most efficient players in the field (8.85 PPR, positive differential).
Zach Spencer contributed steady rounds, even if scoring margins stayed narrow.

👉 Summary: Close games, solid play, and just enough bad timing to keep things humble.

📊 Stat Leaders
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)
1 Scott Desens 9.25
2 Ben Galstian 9.06
3 Jacky White 9.05
4 Ken McConnell 8.85
5 Anthony Mothersell 8.5

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)
1 Anthony Mothersell 2.25
2 Scott Desens 0.75
3 Jacky White 0.4
4 Ken McConnell 0.15
5 Danny Zawisza 0

🎯 Bags In Percentage
1 Scott Desens 68.75
2 Ben Galstian 66.67
3 Jacky White 63.75
4 Tom Wheaton 62.5
5 Ken McConnell 61.54

💥 Total 4 Baggers
1 Ben Galstian 4
1 Jacky White 4
1 Ken McConnell 4
4 Anthony Mothersell 2
5 Scott Desens 1

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage
1 Ken McConnell 30.77
2 Scott Desens 25
3 Ben Galstian 22.22
4 Jacky White 20
5 Danny Zawisza 20

🏃 Most Rounds Played
1 Jacky White 20
1 Anthony Mothersell 20
3 Ben Galstian 18
4 Jordan Matlock 17
5 Ken McConnell 13

🧺 Total Bags Thrown
1 Jacky White 80
1 Anthony Mothersell 80
3 Ben Galstian 72
4 Jordan Matlock 68
5 Ken McConnell 52

🧾 Final Thoughts

White/Mothersell proved that short brackets don’t need to be close—they can just be efficient exercises in finishing games early.
Galstian/Matlock showed strong consistency but ran into a team that had already entered “wrap this up” mode.
McConnell/Spencer demonstrated that being competitive in every game is admirable, even if it occasionally ends one round too soon.

🏆 Zone Regional  #7 – Tier 4 Singles Recaphttps://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248806/type/bracket🥇 1st Place: John T***...
06/06/2026

🏆 Zone Regional #7 – Tier 4 Singles Recap
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248806/type/bracket

🥇 1st Place: John T***e
A clean winner’s‑bracket run combined with the extremely effective strategy of not needing a second chance.

Opened with a win over Robert Buck
Followed with a win over Carla Mann
In the championship he dropped a game to his regular partner Keith Hurley, then closed it out with a win.

Stat line:
7.06 PPR with a strong +0.57 DPR
Efficient, steady, and rarely uncomfortable

👉 Summary: Won every game he needed to, avoided chaos entirely, and finished before things could get complicated.

🥈 2nd Place: Keith Hurley
A convincing path to the final… until the final reminded him how brackets work.

Early highlight: Win over Tina Barretta (firm but fair).
Followed with a win over Danny Zawisza, which suggests things were going well.
Eventually ran into John T***e and a 22 to 5 loss.

Statistically:
7.4 PPR with an event‑best +0.95 DPR
Strong scoring margins… just not in the last game

👉 Summary: Dominant run, elite differential, and then one inconvenient matchup at the end.

🥉 3rd Place: Carla Mann
A tournament defined by persistence and a very active lower‑bracket presence.

Took an early loss to John T***e, then responded with decisive wins.

Advanced far enough to earn a rematch… which did not go better (21 to 1 loss).

Stat line:
7.63 PPR (best in the field)
High volume with 41 rounds played

👉 Summary: Strong scoring, long run, and the full “see the same opponent again” experience.

📊 Stat Leaders
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)
1 Carla Mann 7.63
2 Keith Hurley 7.4
3 John T***e 7.06
4 Tina Barretta 6.21
5 Danny Zawisza 6.1

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)
1 Keith Hurley 0.95
2 John T***e 0.57
3 Carla Mann 0.1
4 Danny Zawisza -0.63
5 Robert Buck -2.12

🎯 Bags In Percentage
1 Carla Mann 52.44
2 Keith Hurley 48.08
3 John T***e 42.06
4 Tina Barretta 41.07
5 Danny Zawisza 36.67

💥 Total 4 Baggers
1 Keith Hurley 7
2 Carla Mann 2
2 John T***e 2
4 Tina Barretta 1

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage
1 Keith Hurley 10.77
2 Tina Barretta 7.14
3 Carla Mann 4.88
4 John T***e 3.17

🏃 Most Rounds Played
1 Keith Hurley 65
2 John T***e 63
3 Carla Mann 41
4 Danny Zawisza 30
5 Robert Buck 17

🧺 Total Bags Thrown
1 Keith Hurley 260
2 John T***e 252
3 Carla Mann 164
4 Danny Zawisza 120
5 Robert Buck 68

🧾 Final Thoughts

John T***e kept things simple: win early, keep winning, avoid complications.
Keith Hurley dominated most of the day, just not the one game that mattered most.
Carla Mann proved that persistence works—especially if you don’t mind seeing the same opponents again.

👉 Final takeaway:
Winning the winner’s bracket is efficient.
The loser’s bracket builds character.
Running into the same opponent twice… usually answers all remaining questions

🏆 Zone Regional  #7 – Tier 1 Singles Recaphttps://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248804/type/bracket🥇 1st Place: Shane Mai...
06/06/2026

🏆 Zone Regional #7 – Tier 1 Singles Recap
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248804/type/bracket

🥇 1st Place: Shane Maier
This was what you’d call a “professional” tournament—efficient, controlled, and largely free of unnecessary detours.

Rolled through the winner’s bracket with wins like:

27 to 2 (a strong hint of what was coming)
24 to 15 over Justin Hendrickson
23 to 12 over Jeremy Bumbarger

Reached the final without needing a comeback tour, which remains the recommended strategy.

Statistically:

9.94 PPR
Event‑best 0.99 DPR among top finishers
26 four baggers

👉 Summary: Played fewer games than the field, won more of them, and avoided the entire concept of stress.

🥈 2nd Place: Jeremy Bumbarger
A tournament defined by volume, endurance, and a refusal to stop playing even when a normal person might consider it.

Survived a massive lower‑bracket run including:

21 to 16 over Justin Hendrickson
21 to 10 over Kayden Blencowe

Earned a shot at the final but ran into a well-rested Shane Maier.

Stat line:

121 rounds played (objectively excessive)
9.65 PPR
Tournament-leading 38 four baggers

👉 Summary: Played an entire extra tournament within the tournament… and almost pulled it off anyway.

🥉 3rd Place: Jacky White
Another long, exhausting run that stopped just short of the final.

Key wins included:

26 to 9 over Ben Galstian
21 to 13 over Jacob Frey
22 to 10 over Kayden Blencowe

Eventually clipped just before reaching the championship.

Statistically:

82 rounds played
9.95 PPR (elite scoring despite heavy workload)

👉 Summary: Scored like a champion, played like a marathoner, finished like someone who had seen enough co****le for one day.

📊 Stat Leaders
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)
1 Jacob Frey 10.1
2 Jacky White 9.95
3 Shane Maier 9.94
4 Kayden Blencowe 9.68
5 Jeremy Bumbarger 9.65

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)
1 Shane Maier 0.99
2 Jacob Frey 0.62
3 Jacky White 0.27
4 Kayden Blencowe 0.25
5 Jeremy Bumbarger 0.21

🎯 Bags In Percentage
1 Jacob Frey 79.23
2 Jacky White 76.52
3 Shane Maier 76.07
4 Jeremy Bumbarger 72.52
5 Kayden Blencowe 72.22

💥 Total 4 Baggers
1 Jeremy Bumbarger 38
2 Jacob Frey 32
3 Jacky White 27
4 Shane Maier 26
5 Kayden Blencowe 20

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage
1 Jacob Frey 45.07
2 Shane Maier 37.14
3 Jacky White 32.93
4 Jeremy Bumbarger 31.4
5 Kayden Blencowe 27.78

🏃 Most Rounds Played
1 Jeremy Bumbarger 121
2 Jacky White 82
3 Justin Hendrickson 75
4 Kayden Blencowe 72
5 Jacob Frey 71

🧺 Total Bags Thrown
1 Jeremy Bumbarger 484
2 Jacky White 328
3 Justin Hendrickson 300
4 Kayden Blencowe 288
5 Jacob Frey 284

🧾 Final Thoughts

Shane Maier proved that the best strategy is still the simplest: win early, keep winning, go home on time.
Jeremy Bumbarger showed that if you stay in the bracket long enough, statistically something good should happen.
Jacky White demonstrated elite scoring under extreme workload—and possibly a high tolerance for repetition.

👉 Final takeaway:
Win the winner’s bracket if you can.
If not, prepare to play everyone you’ve ever met

🏆 Zone Regional  #7 – Tier 3 Doubles RecapA bracket that featured strong runs, a few sudden disappearances (scoreboard-w...
06/06/2026

🏆 Zone Regional #7 – Tier 3 Doubles Recap
A bracket that featured strong runs, a few sudden disappearances (scoreboard-wise), and one team that decided the championship match was the perfect time to stop sharing points entirely.
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248802/type/bracket

🥇 1st Place: Alexis Holmquist & Carla Mann
This duo followed a very clean and efficient strategy:
Win early, keep winning, and avoid unnecessary complications.

Opened by dispatching their first real opponent and then followed with a 22 to 17 win over Hurley/T***e.
In the semifinal, they delivered a 22 to 0 result, which is generally considered decisive and slightly rude.

Statistically:

Carla Mann was one of the most efficient players in the field (7.81 PPR, positive differential).
Alexis Holmquist quietly posted one of the best DPRs in the event (1.59), meaning when she scored, it tended to matter.

👉 Summary: Minimal drama, maximum control, and one game where the opponent was more of a spectator.

🥈 2nd Place: Tina Barretta & Danny Zawisza
A strong run that looked promising right up until it suddenly… stopped.

Earned convincing wins including 23 to 5 and 23 to 15 margins earlier in the bracket.
Reached the final and were immediately introduced to a 0-point outcome.

Stat line:

Tina Barretta maintained steady output across a high number of rounds (28).
Danny Zawisza contributed consistent volume, even if efficiency fluctuated.

👉 Summary: A very solid tournament, briefly interrupted by running into a team that refused to allow points.

🥉 3rd Place: Herman Colon & Cory White
This team took the scenic route—longer, more exhausting, but ultimately productive.

Dropped into the lower bracket and proceeded to go on a run that included:

24 to 0 (emphatic)
25 to 8 (still emphatic)
27 to 0 (at this point, a pattern)

Eventually ran out of bracket space before reaching the final.

Stat highlights:

Herman Colon posted a strong 1.11 DPR and played a heavy workload (38 rounds).
Cory White added stability with 34 rounds and a positive differential.

👉 Summary: A lower-bracket run fueled by momentum, efficiency, and several games where the opponent might want a rematch… later.

📊 Stat Leaders
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)
1 Keith Hurley 7.9
2 Carla Mann 7.81
3 Matthew Cauwels 7.62
4 Cory White 7.59
5 Timothy Jorgensen 7.57

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)
1 Alexis Holmquist 1.59
2 Herman Colon 1.11
3 Carla Mann 0.5
3 Timothy Jorgensen 0.5
5 Cory White 0.44

🎯 Bags In Percentage
1 Keith Hurley 56.25
1 Carla Mann 56.25
3 Timothy Jorgensen 51.79
4 Cory White 51.47
5 Herman Colon 48.68

💥 Total 4 Baggers
1 Herman Colon 4
1 Tim DeBottis 4
3 Alexis Holmquist 3
4 Keith Hurley 2
4 Cory White 2

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage
1 Alexis Holmquist 17.65
2 Tim DeBottis 13.79
3 Herman Colon 10.53
4 Keith Hurley 10
5 Timothy Jorgensen 7.14

🏃 Most Rounds Played
1 Herman Colon 38
2 Cory White 34
3 Danny Zawisza 29
3 Tim DeBottis 29
5 Tina Barretta 28

🧺 Total Bags Thrown
1 Herman Colon 152
2 Cory White 136
3 Danny Zawisza 116
3 Tim DeBottis 116
5 Tina Barretta 112

🧾 Final Thoughts

Holmquist/Mann proved that efficiency and timing beat everything—especially when you occasionally allow zero points.
Barretta/Zawisza showed strong consistency, right up until the final made a compelling case for shorter games.
Colon/White demonstrated that the long route is viable, provided you’re comfortable playing a large percentage of the tournament yourself.

👉 Final takeaway:
Scoring helps.
Preventing scoring helps more.
Winning 22 to 0 is generally the clearest form of communication available.

🏆 Zone Regional  #7 – Tier 1 Doubles Recaphttps://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248801/type/bracket🥇 1st Place: Kayden Bl...
06/06/2026

🏆 Zone Regional #7 – Tier 1 Doubles Recap
https://app.iplayacl.com/find-events/248801/type/bracket

🥇 1st Place: Kayden Blencowe & Justin Hendrickson
Some teams battle through chaos. This team opted for a more efficient strategy: not losing.

Opened with a routine win and never really let things get uncomfortable after that.
Took down Saltalamachia/Emmons 21 to 5, which is generally considered impolite.
Followed that with a controlled win over Maynes/Fazzone to lock up the winner’s side.

Stat-wise, they backed it up:

Kayden Blencowe: elite efficiency, strong DPR, and a casual 100 total bags thrown with 74 going in (which is annoyingly good).
Justin Hendrickson: consistent scoring and very little drama—exactly what you want in a partner.

👉 Summary: They showed up, played well, and avoided the entire concept of adversity.

🥈 2nd Place: Jacob Frey & Shane Maier
This team did almost everything right… right up until the point where they didn’t.

Strong wins throughout the bracket.
Held steady deep into the winner’s bracket before running into the eventual champions.
Forced into second place despite playing at a level that normally wins things.

Individually:

Shane put up a healthy 9.25 PPR and stayed in the positive column.
Frey delivered consistent, across-the-board production without any glaring weaknesses.

👉 Summary: Very good. Just unfortunately present in the same bracket as “slightly better.”

🥉 3rd Place: Scott DeRue & Timothy Young
If effort alone determined results, this team would have needed a bigger trophy.

Dropped early and immediately decided they would simply play the rest of the tournament anyway.
Put together a long string of elimination wins, including:

25 to 1 (which feels unnecessary but effective)
21 to 15 over a strong Maynes/Fazzone team

Eventually ran out of bracket… and probably energy.

Statistically:

Scott DeRue played 52 rounds
Timothy Young played 49 rounds

👉 Summary: They didn’t just compete in the tournament—they experienced it.

📊 Stat Leaders
🎯 Points Per Round (PPR)
1 Ken McConnell 9.86
2 Kayden Blencowe 9.72
3 Joey Fazzone 9.68
4 Timothy Young 9.61
5 Justin Hendrickson 9.43

⚖️ Differential Per Round (DPR)
1 Joey Fazzone 1.55
2 Matt Saltalamachia 1.31
3 Kayden Blencowe 1.24
4 Justin Hendrickson 1.14
5 Jeremy Bumbarger 0.75

🎯 Bags In Percentage
1 Kayden Blencowe 74
2 Timothy Young 73.47
3 Ted Sullivan 73.28
4 Ken McConnell 73.21
5 Joey Fazzone 72.58

💥 Total 4 Baggers
1 Timothy Young 14
2 Joey Fazzone 11
2 Scott DeRue 11
4 Kayden Blencowe 9
4 Ted Sullivan 9

🔥 4 Bagger Percentage
1 Chris Hart 36.36
2 Kayden Blencowe 36
3 Joey Fazzone 35.48
4 Jacob Frey 32
5 Ted Sullivan 31.03

🏃 Most Rounds Played
1 Scott DeRue 52
2 Timothy Young 49
3 Joey Fazzone 31
4 Kyle Demo 30
4 David Maynes 30

🧺 Total Bags Thrown
1 Scott DeRue 208
2 Timothy Young 196
3 Joey Fazzone 124
4 Kyle Demo 120
4 David Maynes 120
🧾 Final Thoughts

Blencowe/Hendrickson proved that the best way through a bracket is to simply not make it complicated.
Frey/Maier were consistent, efficient, and probably a little annoyed at how the timing worked out.
DeRue/Young demonstrated that persistence is real, admirable, and occasionally exhausting.

👉 Final takeaway:
Being the best team is helpful.
Being the freshest team is also helpful.
Occasionally, being the team that has played half the bracket is… educational

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Walworth, NY

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