Cheerleading
Split Halves Cheerleading Team Sheet
NEW
Team roster · Split Halves · up to 9 players
Build a split-halves cheerleading team sheet.
The two-tone design across the whole roster — up to 9 players on one printable page, each with their own photo and details.
Players (5/9)
Player 1
Photo
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
Player 2
Photo
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
Player 3
Photo
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
Player 4
Photo
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
Player 5
Photo
Click or drop a JPG or PNG
Up to 20 MB
1-page PDF · up to 9 cards · US Letter
Just one player?
Split Halves — normal 2.5″ × 3.5″
Single-player version at the standard trading-card size. Four identical cards per page.
Open
Frame-worthy size
Split Halves — enlarged 3.5″ × 5″
Single player at a bigger size — keepsake-ready, one card per US Letter page.
Open
Sideline squads, competition teams, dance team crossover — cheerleading photographs well in a stunt or tumbling pose. The 'Position' field handles flyer, base, captain, top. This page builds the 9-up team sheet — every player on the roster on one US Letter page. Each card has its own photo, name, jersey number, and position; share team color and design across the whole sheet. The Split Halves design uses two large color blocks; pick one team color (top) and one accent (bottom) — the photo and details sit in the white interior panel.
Notes from a season of printing these
- Use a high-quality photo. Mid-stunt or mid-jump photos read best. Uniform colors against the gym floor or sideline make a clean backdrop.
- Up to 9 players. Add only as many as your roster has — empty slots stay blank. Every card uses the same team name and color scheme.
- Cut into 9 separate cards or hand out the whole sheet. Some coaches print one sheet per parent and let them cut at home; others cut at the banquet.
- Use the same photo crop ratio across all 9.If every player’s photo uses the same shoulders-up framing, the team sheet looks like a coordinated set rather than nine random snapshots.
- Drag and zoom to crop.The photo frame shows exactly what ends up on the card. Center the face in the middle third — that’s the area readers’ eyes land on first.
Common questions
Why 9 cards instead of 12?
9 cards (3×3) at trading-card size fit cleanly on a US Letter sheet with comfortable cutting margins. 12 cards would either shrink each card below 2 × 3 inches (too small to read) or extend off the page.
What if my roster is more than 9 players?
Print two sheets — fill the first 9 slots, then come back and print a second sheet with the remaining players. Use the same team name and color scheme on both sheets so they read as one set.
What if my roster is fewer than 9 players?
Add only the players you have — empty card slots stay blank on the sheet. The sheet still prints correctly with just the cards that have data.
Do I need an account or login to use this?
No. The generator runs entirely in your browser — nothing gets uploaded to a server. You can use it anonymously, no signup, no Adobe Acrobat, no watermark.
What paper should I use?
60–100 lb cardstock for cards you'll handle a lot (binders, pockets). Standard printer paper bends and curls within a day. Glossy photo paper works for keepsake prints if your printer supports it.
Can I edit the PDF after I download it?
The PDF is flat — re-edit by coming back to this page and regenerating with new inputs. Re-uploading the photo and re-typing names is faster than fighting an Acrobat editor.
