Cornhole and ENA

08 17, 2012 Blog, We Are ENA Comments Off   Print this blog

Cornhole. It’s a technically simple game. You take a bean bag and throw it in a hole on a slanted board (in our case, custom ENA boards made by Joshua Gochee, Customer Support Engineer here at ENA). Sounds easy enough, right?

Tournaments are played across the country, the next being in Nashville, Tennessee, at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel. While the game may be simple in theory, one look at the rules (http://www.playcornhole.org/rules.shtml) will show it’s taken seriously, and a second look at the payout on August 18th backs up that assertion of seriousness to the tune of $10,000!

In the Nashville office, ENA has been holding its own competition to find out who is the best cornholer in the office, and after an intense week and half of competition, the ENA cornhole champions (a team that went undefeated in the tournament, by the way) are Patrick McGee, the Lead Tennessee ASM, and Mark Sunderhaus, a Tennessee ASM! They now have bragging rights around the office, but I’m sure they’ll have some challenges for the crown coming soon!

Have questions? Want to congratulate (or challenge) Patrick and Mark, or do you simply want to drop a line complimenting Joshua on his awesome ENA boards? Post here or let us know on Twitter or Facebook!

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About Chris Willis | Follow @ENA_Chris

Chris is currently ENA’s Social Media and Event Marketing Specialist, and he’s been with ENA since May of 2012. Prior to that, he was a student at MTSU studying English. He’s written numerous screenplays, and has turned many of them into films made with colleague Jordan Bennett. When he’s not writing for pleasure or ENA, he finds himself in a number of roles. Sometimes he’s a bass player in a local rock band. Other times he’s a rock climber you can find at Climb Nashville. If he isn’t in any of those roles though, he’s probably driving a race car somewhere. Oh, yeah. Did I forget to mention he’s been a race car driver for nearly a decade? ENA employees are anything but ordinary and boring.


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