Broomhill Sports Club was founded in Glasgow in 2004. A decade later, BSC Glasgow Football Club was established and since the 2014/15 season, the club has been competed in the Lowland Football League. During this first season, BSC Glasgow won the SFA South Region Challenge Cup, a tournament featuring some 69 non-league clubs in the south of Scotland. The club reached the final of the Challenge Cup for a second time in 2018, though they lost to Civil Service Strollers after extra time.
On 1 July 2021, the club announced that it had broken away from Broomhill Sports Club and changed their name to ‘Broomhill Football Club’. This name change was short-lived as in May 2022, a partnership with football media brand Open Goal was announced. Since the beginning of the 2022/23 season, the club has been known as ‘Open Goal Broomhill’.
For my original badge redesign, I opted to do away with the large white negative space at the centre of the current badge and replace it with a football. I also employed a more stylised ‘BSC’.

With the current name, I have decided to present the club as ‘Broomhill FC’, making use of the more recent colour scheme and employing it in a minimalistic roundel.





















Wick Academy Football Club was established in 1893. The club’s name comes from the former Pulteneytown Academy (which closed in 2016) in Wick. The club’s link to the actual academy was tenuous and was only maintained when John Davidson, a teacher at Pultneytown Academy, was elected the first club captain (Davidson was listed as ‘leader’ in the minute of this first meeting).

Turriff United Football Club was established as a junior side in 1954. Along with 

Strathspey Thistle Football Club was established as a junior side in 1993. The name was chosen so as to reflect the club’s belonging to the Strathspey community and not only to Grantown-on-Spey, where the club is based. During their sixteen-year spell as a junior side, the Strathy Jags won several honours, though never topped the table.

Rothes Football Club was established in 1938 and joined the 

Nairn County Football Club was established in 1914 and gained admittance into the 

Lossiemouth Football Club was established in 1945 and joined the 

Keith Football Club was established in 1910 in the small Banffshire town from which it gets its name. The club competed on a junior level until it was admitted into the 

Inverurie Loco Works Football Club was established as a junior side by the workers of said locomotive workshops in 1903. Originally, these workshops were operated by the Great North of Scotland Railway (1854-1922) before becoming part of the London and North Eastern Railway (1923-1947).
