Truth or Consequences hosts multi-day ACL cornhole tournament
Truth or Consequences drew ACL players from six western states as a three-day format split seniors, doubles, blind draw and singles across CPI tiers.

Truth or Consequences spent the weekend as more than a tournament site. The American Cornhole League Interstate Tournament turned the Civic Center into a regional stop for players from New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado and beyond, with all skill levels welcome and a format built to keep everyone in the mix.
The schedule gave the event its reach. Friday opened with seniors, women and juniors in the morning before a Friday Swap in the evening. Saturday centered on doubles in the morning and a tiered blind draw in the afternoon. Sunday closed with singles across multiple CPI-based tiers. That structure let newer players enter lower divisions for meaningful games while higher-tier players faced tighter competition, a setup that showed how the ACL tries to scale cornhole without narrowing the field to only elite brackets.

The economics were laid out just as clearly. Players needed an active ACL account, payouts were set at 75 percent across the board and were processed through the ACL wallet, and the director held the right to reclassify players to the proper tier to keep CPI levels aligned. Entry fees ranged from $20 for the Friday Swap to $80 per team for doubles and up to $50 per player for the higher singles and blind-draw tiers. Doors opened at 8:30 a.m. each day, spectators were admitted free and players paid a $5 door fee. SunDogs Cornhole was listed as the contact for the event, with the Civic Center at 400 West 4th Street.
The venue fit the assignment. The Truth or Consequences Civic Center auditorium measures 7,098 square feet and seats from 150 to 925, enough room to handle a multi-day bracketed event that pulled a steady stream of players through town. One local summary put the turnout at roughly 50 to 60 competitors, ages 11 to 65, a spread that underlined both the interstate draw and the cross-generational pull of the sport.
The American Cornhole League bills itself as the premier league for professional and recreational cornhole in the United States, and the Truth or Consequences stop reflected that mission in practice. By opening its doors to anyone with an ACL account and structuring play across seniors, women, juniors, doubles, blind draw and singles tiers, the weekend showed how cornhole can travel beyond the biggest metros and still pack a civic center with players, families and enough foot traffic to make a small city feel like the center of the sport.
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