Plympton Bulldogs Football Banners
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Select Express Post at checkout and your Plympton Bulldogs Football Banners order can arrive in as little as 2 business days.
Plympton Bulldogs Football Banners - Back the Bulldogs
Whether it's a milestone game, a hard-earned achievement, or a grand final to celebrate, FootyBanners.com makes it easy to create a personalised banner for your favourite Plympton Bulldogs player. Show your Bulldogs pride with a custom banner the whole club will love.
Simple to Order
Choose a Single Player Banner and provide the player's name, surname, guernsey number, and milestone. Our banners are printed with permanent inks on heavy-duty, weatherproof paper - built to handle a blazing South Australian afternoon on the field.
Two Players, One Banner
When two Bulldogs are marking the same milestone, our Two Player Banner celebrates both at once. Provide each player's name and guernsey number for a quality dual banner your club will treasure.
Team Banners for Group Celebrations
Our Team Banner option fits 3 to 6 players in a single banner. Set the top line - something like "Plympton Bulldogs - We Back Our Boys" - and celebrate the group together. Ideal for presentation nights, finals, and group milestones.
Wall Keepsake Banners
Available in Small, Medium, and Large, our Wall Keepsake Banners are printed on thick recyclable paper with waterproof inks. Display your Bulldogs banner in the clubrooms, the garage, or the games room as a lasting tribute to your favourite Plympton player.
Grand Final Banners
Available in 4.5m and 5.5m, our Grand Final Banners can be fully customised with your own top and bottom text. Contact us for personalised design advice for your Plympton Bulldogs Football Club grand final banner.
About Plympton Bulldogs Football Club
Origins and Founding
The Plympton Football Club was established in 1937 by local resident Robert P. McGhee, a Victorian who brought his love of Australian rules football to the suburbs south-west of Adelaide. McGhee chose red and black as the club's colours in honour of his Victorian football roots, and the club quickly took root in the Plympton community. An earlier football body known as Plympton FC competed in the Mid-Southern Football Association as far back as 1921, but the current club traces its official founding to McGhee's 1937 formation. The club became known as the Bulldogs and has carried that identity ever since.
Club History
The Plympton Football Club spent its formative decades competing in the Glenelg District Football Association and its successor competitions. The club claimed its first A-Grade premiership in 1950 and went on to add further flags in 1956, 1964, 1967, 1979, 1981, and 1985 across various iterations of the Glenelg-South Adelaide competition. When the Southern Metropolitan Football League folded at the end of the 1986 season, Plympton joined the Southern Football League Division 1 and immediately hit their stride, winning three consecutive premierships in 1987, 1988, and 1989. The club transitioned to the South Australian Football Association for the 1990 season and then to the South Australian Amateur Football League (SAAFL) when the SAFA folded at the end of 1995. In the SAAFL era, Plympton has added further premierships including Division 5 in 2011 and Division 4 in 2013. The club currently competes in Division 3 of the Adelaide Footy League. Plympton has been a strong developer of talent at the elite level, producing AFL players including Bryce Gibbs (Carlton), Cameron Hitchcock (Port Adelaide), Christian Howard (Western Bulldogs), and Patrick McCarthy (Carlton).
Home Ground
Plympton FC plays its home matches at the Plympton Park Memorial Recreation Ground in Plympton Park, a suburb in the City of Marion situated approximately 9 kilometres south-west of the Adelaide CBD. The ground has served as the club's home base throughout its modern era and sits within a broader recreational precinct that also hosts cricket and soccer activities. In 1979, the Plympton Football Club and Plympton Footballers Cricket Club joined together to form the Plympton Sports and Recreation Club, cementing the ground as a multi-sport community hub.
Community and Programs
Plympton FC fields teams across multiple grades including seniors, reserves, and C-grade, as well as a women's team competing in the Adelaide Footy League. Junior football is catered for through affiliated teams in the Metro South Junior Football League, giving the next generation of Bulldogs a pathway from early childhood through to senior ranks. The club's involvement in the Metro South competition has produced numerous players who have progressed through to the state level and beyond. Plympton maintains strong community ties through its Sports and Recreation Club, which brings football, cricket, and soccer together under one umbrella.
Plympton Park
Plympton Park is a residential suburb in Adelaide's south-western metropolitan area, bounded by the City of Marion and the City of West Torrens. It was developed largely in the post-World War II era as the city expanded outward, and today it is a well-established community with strong sporting and recreational traditions. The area sits close to Glenelg Beach and is served by the Glenelg tram line, making it easily accessible from the Adelaide city centre. Plympton Park's community identity has been shaped in part by the long presence of the Bulldogs, who have provided local residents with a football home for nearly nine decades.
For more information about the club, visit the Plympton Bulldogs official website, follow them on Facebook, or check out their Instagram.
Footy Banner Information
Material: All Footy Banners are printed on 1.6 Metre high coated paper using permanent inks which will not run, even if they get wet. They are fully recyclable.
How to Use: We recommend taping broomsticks or plastic pipe to the ends of the banner to hold it flat whilst the player runs through it. If you cut vertical slits in the banner in the centre, it creates a weak spot where it will break and look best when run through. There are instructions and images for how to cut these in the FAQ section below.
On a windy day, cut smaller vertical slits in the Footy Banner so if the wind catches it, it doesn't rip too soon! This is why we do not pre-cut them, and also so you can get photographs with your intact banner when it looks at it's best.
Tip: Some players choose to only cut one weak spot in their banner so it can be saved and displayed later by taping it back together on the back.Pro Tip: Cut the weak spot to one side of the mascot or team logo so it stays intact as well!
Return and Refund Policy
As each banner is custom made, once ordered, we cannot return them.
Please check the details you submit for printing carefully, as we will make the banner using the exact spelling and information you provide.
































