Baggin Rights Cornhole Battle of the Clubs set for Virginia showdown
Sixteen players chased ACL points and club bragging rights at Legacy Park Sports Complex, where a double-elimination Battle of the Clubs drew teams into Ruther Glen.

Sixteen of 50 registered players made Baggin Rights Cornhole Battle of the Clubs a tight ACL points stop at Legacy Park Sports Complex in Ruther Glen, where club bragging rights were on the line alongside a $20 entry and a $40-per-team note. The June 27 event was built for a straight competitive answer: which club could claim the day in a double-elimination bracket.
Jamal Moore served as event director, and the listing put the start at 12:00 p.m. with the format marked local, open, doubles, BYOP and bracket. The setup gave the field a points-driven framework instead of a casual local throw, which is exactly why the club-versus-club angle carried weight in a league that calls itself the premier home for professional and recreational cornhole in the United States.
The event notes spelled out the tone in plain language: “Battle of the clubs may the best club team win.” That kind of framing mattered in a 16-player field, where each draw had enough pressure to shape the bracket without turning the day into an oversized grind. With ACL points attached, the result had the potential to ripple beyond one afternoon and into how clubs measured themselves against nearby competition.
Legacy Park Sports Complex, at 8217 County Fair Ln in Ruther Glen, Virginia 22546, has become a recurring tournament stop under new ownership. The venue identifies itself as the former Virginia Sports Complex and says it is hosting many tournaments, with a waiver required for visitors and players before they take part. In Caroline County, that makes the site more than a one-off host: it is positioning itself as a regular landing spot for organized cornhole action, and June 27 fit that pattern with a club battle designed to matter on the board and inside the rivalry.
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