Lacrosse
Circle Badge Lacrosse Team Sheet
NEW
Team roster · Circle Badge · up to 9 players
Build a circle-badge lacrosse team sheet.
The badge design across an entire roster — up to 9 players on one printable page, each with their own photo.
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?
Circle Badge — normal 2.5″ × 3.5″
Single-player version at the standard trading-card size. Four identical cards per page.
Open
Frame-worthy size
Circle Badge — enlarged 3.5″ × 5″
Single player at a bigger size — keepsake-ready, one card per US Letter page.
Open
Attack, defense, midfield, and goalie all photograph well in the standard pose with the stick across the chest. Spring and fall club seasons end with banquet card swaps. 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 Circle Badge design tints the badge to your team color, so picking a color the photo background contrasts with reads cleanest.
Print-and-cut notes
- Use a high-quality photo. Stick across the chest, helmet on, in pads — the standard team-photo pose translates straight to a card.
- 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.
