20260322_BristollCityWCharlton_WC332 copy

Club News

City duo present free kit to local girls school teams.

08 Jun 2026BCW Media Team

City Women's Jasmine Bull and Megan Connolly joined Bristol City Robins Foundation to present a brand new free football kit to a local school's girls' team on International Women's Day.

Girls from Evergreen Primary Academy (pictured below) School received the brand-new Premier League football kit, as part of the League’s ongoing support for women’s and girls’ football. Evergreen donned their new kits for the Let Girls Play Football Festival.

The following schools also received an allocation of free kits: St Peter’s Church of England Primary School, Luckwell Primary School, West Town Lane Primary School and Victoria Park Primary.

The schools applied to receive the kit, which includes 13 outfield sets and one goalkeeper set plus optional Nike 2.0 hijabs, thanks to their involvement in the Premier League Primary Stars programme with the Robins Foundation.

Delivered in partnership with Nike, the Premier League Kit Scheme will see more than 58,000 girls in more than 4,000 primary schools across England and Wales receive the free football kit, featuring the Premier League and No Room For Racism emblems.

Dan Hall, Robins Foundation Priamry Schools Manager said: "A big thank you to the Premier League for providing the local schools we work with free football kits. The girls were so excited and really happy to receive them from our Women’s First Team players. I can't wait to see them playing in their new kits in future”

Richard Masters, Premier League Chief Executive, said: “Football is a game that everyone can enjoy, and it has the ability to empower and inspire young people in the classroom, the playground and on the pitch. I hope the girls enjoy their new Premier League kit and that they continue to reap the many benefits that football can bring, both on and off the pitch.”

The Kit Scheme is just one element of the Premier League’s primary school education programme, Premier League Primary Stars, and builds upon the 7,000 free football kits that have already been given away via the Premier League’s primary schools programme since 2017.

Dan Burrows, Senior Director, Nike Social & Community Impact said: “Nike is delighted to partner with the Premier League on the Kit Scheme for girls. Our work with partners like the Premier League is vital to removing cultural, social and economic barriers to participation, so all young people, especially girls, have an opportunity to benefit from play and sport. Together, we can create an active next generation and a more equitable future for all.” 

Launched in 2017 and available to every primary school in England and Wales, Premier League Primary Stars uses the appeal of football to help children to be active and develop essential life skills.

The free primary schools programme enables children to take part in, and enjoy, more football, sport and physical activity, as well as increasing their interest, understanding and confidence in English, PSHE and Maths to support their development of skills and values that are crucial to success in later life. More than 19,000 schools across England and Wales have engaged with the programme to date. 

Premier League Primary Stars provides teachers and parents with free downloadable resources across a range of curriculum subjects at Key Stage 1 (age 5-7) and Key Stage 2 (age 7-11), developed by teachers for teachers, and in collaboration with experts such as the National Literacy Trust and the PSHE Association. 

Currently, 104 professional football clubs from across the leagues run in-classroom Premier League Primary Stars sessions in local partner schools. More than 68,000 teachers have signed up to access free online national curriculum-linked resources, to date.

The total Premier League investment into the programme, via the Premier League Charitable Fund, is over £60 million, to date.

For more information, please visit Premier League Primary Stars