About Cornhole Boards
I've played all over the country and pitched on thousands of cornhole boards. I've seen ‘em all. The weak plywood set that bounced when hit like a scared puppy. The cornhole set pieced together from scrap wood – I think it was a barn door – I'm still picking the splinters out from that one. Sets with cornholes that weren't even circles. Sets that were stickier than lawn chairs in July. And the plastic cornhole sets that I won't even talk about.
I'm sure you've seen a lot of these backyard sets too. And they're fine – if you just want to be a backyard cornhole player. But when you want to graduate to the big leagues, you need something better. Big time cornhole players get that way because they don't have to learn a new board every time they play. They play on consistent equipment like ACO cornhole boards.
Whether you're tossing in Tennessee or pitching in Pittsburgh, the experience should be the same. The same smooth slide. An even finish with no fast or slow spots. A solid build that doesn't budge when the bags come raining down. And no splinters. Run your hands down an ACO board. It feels like a newly waxed floor.
You could call it consistency. I call it common sense.