When Trey was young, Eric nudged him to follow in his footsteps and play football and baseball. “But I like to call him the Tony Romo.”Last month, at a tournament in Philadelphia, a cornhole player named Lester Price faced a tricky shot.
It was a twist on the Ryders’ father-son dynamic. Tony Romo. This is like Andy Reid choosing a fourth-down play, hearing Romo’s take on CBS, and thinking, Ryder has two jobs as the cornhole color analyst. When he and his wife Shelby got married, attendees at the wedding signed cornhole boards instead of a guest book. And another the weekend after that. Not everybody has that. “A lot of people have described him as the Kirk Herbstreit of cornhole,” said Jeff McCarragher, his play-by-play partner. Eric Ryder, who’d recently recovered from esophageal cancer, made it through to the TV portion of the event. “He’s probably thinking in the back of his mind, In May, at a qualifier in Rock Hill, South Carolina, Ryder found himself analyzing the game of another player he revered: his dad. During a recent match, he noted that a player threw his bags with a particularly high arc. It's what they do now that he is with the Cowboys.It could be a rec league basketball game at a local church in the offseason or a sectional qualifying golf tournament outside Houston ... they would be there.The Romos are a tight family. On TV, Ryder frequently uses the term “airmail.” Airmail is to cornhole what a swish is to basketball. Cornhole players have names like McGuffin. And ace analyst Trey Ryder made it that much more watchable.At first glance, cornhole on TV seems pretty basic: person, camera, bag, hole. A “bully bag” is a bag that’s thrown to shove an opponent’s bag out of the way. I'm blessed to have two parents like I do. The network wound up airing all Ryder, who is just 26 years old, had a path to the microphone that Romo or Cris Collinsworth would recognize. As they contemplated a tricky shot, the voice of Cornhole Romo was booming out across the arena, explaining what the player should do. Meet the Tony Romo of Cornhole. Two of Price’s turquoise bags hung over the top half of the hole. Or as Ryder put it: “What I try to deliver is: ‘He’s going to put the bag right here.’”If you’ve flipped on ESPN during the pandemic, you’ve probably seen cornhole. Born: 21-Apr-1980 Birthplace: San Diego, CA. That’s the way Ryder talked about Baldwin. If training camp is in San Antonio, Romo's grandparents, Ramiro Sr. and Felicita, will attend a couple of practices. Rather than paring back, cornhole would return during the pandemic with ESPN televised a second cornhole qualifier on the weekend of May 16. “You marry into it and start playing,” Eric said. Partly, he flashes another Romo-esque quality: He gets giddy when he witnesses greatness.Last month, in Philadelphia, a cornholer named James Baldwin sunk an astonishing 38 of his final 40 bags. This caused vibrations on the board that might knock in his opponents’ bags, if they were hanging on the edge of the hole. Ryder is the rare sports announcer who can predict the future. At one point, his opponent, Jamie Graham, landed a bag in front of the hole to try to slow him down. “I’m like, ‘Ryder paired his scribbling with subtle observations. Occasionally, the player will rethink his strategy. Content ©2020 The Ringer All Rights Reserved "They understand it's a physical game and things like that happen, but you never want to see your child hurt," Tony said. Eric dove headfirst into the growing sport—the ACL was founded in 2015—until he was good enough to go pro. Players started being able to hear Ryder’s commentary in real time.

“He’ll say, ‘Oh, what a flop shot,’” Harris told me. First, he wants to convince viewers that the sport is relatable. news Now he could sketch out cornhole strategy in real time. Partly, he does this with the Telestrator. Five Hispanic players to watch in the NFL playoffs Miami Dolphins linebacker Kiko Alonso is just one of a number of Latino players in vital positions during the NFL playoffs.