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Splash Bros. cap perfect 28-0 run in Mays Landing cornhole league

Splash Bros. ran the table at 28-0, and Mays Landing's nine-week spring had enough side stories to keep every team in the frame. The perfect season now sets the league's new benchmark.

Tanya Okafor··6 min read
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Splash Bros. cap perfect 28-0 run in Mays Landing cornhole league
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Splash Bros. did not just win the Mays Landing Cornhole League’s spring season, they erased any debate about how a perfect run looks in a league format built on repetition, chemistry, and weekly pressure. Over nine weeks and 23 teams, they produced a clean 28-0 finish that stood above a deep table and turned the spring recap into a portrait of total control.

A season that played like a pennant race

The scale of the spring mattered. This was not a one-off bracket or a weekend showcase, but a full nine-week campaign that demanded the same execution every night from every team in the field. The league’s recap treated the season that way too, promising not just a champion’s note but a highlight for every team, because the story of the spring was bigger than one perfect record.

That framing fits the way Mays Landing’s league has grown. With 23 teams in the mix, the spring schedule gave the season enough depth to generate a real hierarchy, and by the end of it the standings were clear enough to show how rare Splash Bros.’ run actually was. They were not simply better in a single stretch. They were better all spring long.

How Splash Bros. built 28-0

A perfect season in cornhole is about more than hot hands. It is about pairing, timing, and the ability to keep a team’s floor high enough that bad weeks never arrive. Splash Bros. answered every weekly test, finishing 28-0 in a league that required consistency over a long spring schedule and rewarded the same two-player rhythm over and over again.

The margin for error was thin even if the record was not. In a league where the next closest teams still finished well above .500, the difference between the unbeaten team and the rest of the pack was not one lucky night or a soft draw. It was sustained control from week to week, which is what makes a perfect 28-0 season feel less like a streak and more like a standard.

That is the part that will linger in Mays Landing. A perfect record in a two-person team format does not happen by accident, and it is even harder to sustain when the season stretches through late May. Splash Bros. turned that grind into a clean finish, and the rest of the league had to spend the spring chasing them.

The chase pack that made the gap real

The standings tell their own story because they show just how strong the field was behind the champions. DEEZ NUTS finished 24-4, BagStreet Boys came in at 23-5, and Fairways and Air Mail both ended at 22-6. Those are the marks of a competitive league, but they also make Splash Bros.’ perfect run look even sharper.

The difference from the top of the table down to the middle of the pack was sizeable, and that separation gave the spring recap its edge. DEEZ NUTS, BagStreet Boys, Fairways, and Air Mail all had strong seasons, but none could close the gap enough to make the title race feel uncertain. Instead, the chase pack served as the proof that Splash Bros. were operating on another level.

That matters in a format like this because records are built slowly. A 24-4 team has had an excellent season by almost any league standard, and 23-5 or 22-6 would usually put a team in contention. Here, those records still sat in the shadow of 28-0, which is exactly what gives the spring its narrative weight.

Why the recap was bigger than the standings

What separates this season recap from a routine results post is how much of the league’s personality it preserves. The update page does not stop at scores and records. It also leans into the human texture that makes local cornhole matter, including the Baggin Dragons family storyline, the three pugs, and even the team that never showed.

Those details are not decoration. They are part of the league’s identity, and they help explain why a spring recap can feel like a season-long chronicle instead of a simple champion announcement. In Mays Landing, the league is documenting the personalities around the boards as carefully as the bags landing on them.

That is a meaningful shift in how cornhole is covered. Leagues are starting to frame regular seasons the way other sports track a title chase, and Mays Landing’s spring gives that approach a convincing example. The perfect record mattered, but so did the rest of the cast, because a league only becomes memorable when the season carries enough detail to remember everyone in it.

What the spring schedule says about the league

The home page adds another layer to the picture. This was a 21-plus league, played in a two-person team format, and it ran a long spring schedule that stretched through late May before the summer league opened for signups. That structure explains why the unbeaten run means so much: this was a season that asked for repeated execution, not a single burst of form.

The format also helps clarify why chemistry mattered so much. A two-person setup leaves little room to hide, which means every missed bag and every clutch finish is magnified across the season. Over a schedule that long, the best teams rise because they can repeat the same shots and the same communication under pressure, and Splash Bros. did that better than anyone else.

The 21-plus setting gave the league its adult rec-league feel, but the format is what gave it its competitive edge. A long spring, a steady weekly rhythm, and a field of 23 teams created the right environment for a true season story. By the end, the unbeaten record read like the natural conclusion of all that structure.

The new benchmark in Mays Landing

This is the kind of season that changes what comes next. Splash Bros.’ 28-0 run now stands as the number every future Mays Landing team will measure itself against, not just because it ended with a title, but because it was sustained across the full nine-week spring schedule. That is the standard now: stay perfect, stay healthy, stay locked in from the opener through the final week.

For the league, the bigger win may be that the recap captured both sides of the sport at once. It gave the perfect team its due, but it also kept the family stories, the pets, the no-shows, and the supporting cast in the frame. That is what turns a good local league into something that feels permanent.

Splash Bros. supplied the cleanest possible ending, but Mays Landing supplied the context that made it matter. A 28-0 season is rare anywhere. In this league, after nine weeks, 23 teams, and a spring full of side stories, it now defines the bar for everybody else.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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