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League organizers — particularly at the grassroots level — tend to treat administration as a chore. It feels like overhead on top of the real work of running the league. That attitude changes fast the first time there is a serious injury, a disputed result, or a team that refuses to pay.
The right forms protect your players, your organization, and you personally. They create a paper trail that resolves disputes before they escalate. Here are the nine you cannot do without.
Collects full name, date of birth, emergency contact, and team assignment. This is your legal record that a specific person officially registered for your league. Without it, you have no proof someone was ever a participant — which matters if anything goes wrong.
Pre-existing conditions, medications, known allergies, blood type. First responders need this information if someone has a health event on the pitch. Players are often reluctant to disclose this but you can make it a registration requirement. A sealed envelope per player kept at the venue is one approach.
Players acknowledge the inherent physical risks of sport and agree not to hold the league liable for injuries that occur during normal play. This is your most important legal document. Have a lawyer review the language at least once for your specific jurisdiction — what holds up varies by location.
Sets the behavioral standards for players, coaches, and spectators. Covers on-field conduct, treatment of referees, sideline behavior, and social media use. When you have to suspend or discipline someone, this is the document you refer to. Without it, discipline becomes subjective and opens you to challenges.
The official list of players registered to each team, signed by the team captain. Prevents illegal player acquisitions mid-season (a team picking up ringers from elsewhere for playoff games). Set a roster lock date and enforce it.
Records the final score, goalscorers, yellow and red cards, any notable incidents, and the referee's name. Both team captains sign it. This is your source of truth for standings updates and the first thing you refer to in any result dispute. Keep originals.
Used whenever something goes wrong — a player injury, an altercation, property damage, a referee complaint. Fill it out on the day, while details are fresh. Include names, times, witness details, and what action was taken. If a situation ever escalates legally, this contemporaneous record is invaluable.
Documents what each team owes, the payment schedule, and the consequences of non-payment (withdrawal from the league, points deductions). Issue a receipt for every payment received. At season end, you will have disputes about money if you don't have this in place. You will not if you do.
Confirms which field or court, which time slots, who is responsible for setup and teardown, what happens if the venue cancels, and what the policy is on weather postponements. This protects you from double-bookings and from venues suddenly claiming they have no record of your booking.
All nine of these forms are available free in The League Tool's Forms Pack. Fill them out on any device, download as PDF, and send by email. No account required.
Fill out, download as PDF, or email. No account, no cost, no catch.
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