[Sports Day] Cool Class Flag Ideas Collection
One of the must-have items for sports festivals and field days: the class flag.
Figuring out the design for the flag that represents your class… it’s tough, right?
And if you’ve made it to this article, you’re probably here to look for ideas!
So, in this article, we’ll introduce lots of recommended design ideas for class flags.
We’ve focused on a “cool” theme, so every idea will look sharp when you raise it.
Use the ideas here as inspiration to create a cool class flag that’s uniquely yours!
- Recommended flag designs for the Red Team at the sports festival. Class flags themed around red.
- [Slogan] Perfect for sports days and athletic festivals! A curated selection of impactful phrases
- Songs that hype up Sports Day and Athletic Festivals: Japanese Music / J-Pop Artist Rankings [2026]
- Carefully selected J-pop to liven up sports days and athletic festivals! Also great as entrance songs.
- Recommended for sports festivals! Examples of funny slogans and how to come up with them
- [Youth Songs] Songs that liven up sports days and athletic festivals. Music that adds color to the event.
- [Sports Day] A roundup of exhilarating, fast-paced tracks perfect for relay race BGM!
- Songs I want to use for a flag dance at a sports day. Recommended songs for a flag dance.
- [Sports Day Cheer Songs] A roundup of classic cheer songs and recommended tracks for parody versions
- Songs that hype up the athlete entrance at school sports festivals
- Get hyped! A collection of Vocaloid songs to energize your sports day and athletic festival
- [Sports Day] A roundup of popular Japanese songs perfect for mass performances [Athletic Festival]
- Sports Day/Field Day BGM: Moving Classics & Uplifting Anthems to Power Your Practice
[Sports Day] Cool Class Flag Ideas (61–70)
A running boy
Here are some perfect ideas for a class flag for Sports Day featuring a running boy and a cheering girl! Draw the boy and girl wearing headbands with a fresh, lively feel, and aim for a dynamic design that conveys the atmosphere of the sports festival to viewers.
Try placing the running boy in the center, the cheering girl around him, and experiment with various layouts.
Adding the Sports Day slogan in the blank space will help express the purpose of the event, too.
Please use these ideas as a reference!
Attack on Titan
Attack on Titan, which originated as a manga and later expanded into novels and an anime.
This dark fantasy follows humanity’s desperate search for survival while being chased by man-eating Titans, and its striking art style is widely recognized, especially among younger audiences.
How about using a parody of it for your sports festival panel idea? The font of the Attack on Titan title is also distinctive, so just mimicking that can easily create an authentic feel.
Give it a try!
coral reef
Colorful coral reefs that adorn the beautiful sea could be the perfect design for a team flag.
Home to a great variety of marine life, coral reefs are truly fitting as a place that sends off teammates heading into competition and welcomes them back.
Rather than highlighting individual strength, they are ideal for expressing teamwork and unity.
It’s a dazzling, brilliant idea that evokes suppleness and a flexible approach to competition—and it’s great for photos, too!
Hanafuda
@balm.roll Hanafuda 🎴 I really love the design of Hanafuda. Ever since I was little, I’ve been captivated by the artwork on these cards. And I finally tried drawing them myself. By actually drawing them, I also got to appreciate the depth of Hanafuda design on a new level. Every New Year, my family and relatives would get together and play a game called “Hana Awase” using these cards. It’s become a New Year’s tradition that’s ingrained in me. Hanafuda (literally “flower cards”) are a type of Japanese karuta. They’re also known as hana karuta, hana garuta, or hana mekuri. Generally, when people say Hanafuda, they mean the “Hachihachi Hana” set: a deck of 48 cards depicting flowers and plants for each of the 12 months, four cards per month, expressing the beauty of nature—flowers, birds, wind, and the moon.HanafudaFlowers, birds, wind, and moonBoar-Deer-Butterfly#CherryBlossom
♬ Beautiful and emotional Japanese style ballad – 3KTrack
Delicate yet powerful hanafuda imagery could create an impact distinct from other teams when used in a team flag design.
Its unmistakable colors and patterns, instantly recognizable as hanafuda, are sure to lift the spirits of anyone familiar with Japanese culture.
Another appeal is the potential to blend tradition and modernity by, for example, styling class names or messages with a Japanese aesthetic.
Among a lineup of team flags, it would stand out and might even boost the opposing team’s excitement.
robot

Everyone admires robot anime characters, right? If you’re students who want to create a class flag with a design that stands out from the rest, how about drawing a robot character on it? The key to drawing robot characters is to think of the robot as a human wearing armor.
Since robot movements are based on human motion, using a human as the model lets you draw more realistic poses! You might also try designing with the image of a robot warrior who will fight alongside you.
manta
Mantas are rays with huge pectoral fins that make a striking impression.
Officially called the reef manta ray in Japanese (Oni-itomaki-ei), this animal’s vivid blue appearance makes it a perfect motif for a sports festival panel.
And because it’s a bit less well-known than classics like tigers or eagles, it’s also a great choice when you don’t want your idea to overlap with others.
By the way, mantas can live on a diet of plankton alone, so they can be seen as a symbol of strength.
For that reason, choosing a manta when you’re striving for victory might just bring good luck!
Night Parade of One Hundred Demons
If you want a cool or dark vibe, designing a Hyakki Yagyō is recommended.
Hyakki Yagyō refers to a procession where a wide variety of yōkai roam in a line.
Thanks to anime and manga, many people may associate it with being “strong” or “cool.” If you’re unsure how to depict it since these creatures don’t exist in reality, try referencing the Hyakki Yagyō scroll paintings or the illustrations of manga artist Shigeru Mizuki.
The sight of various yōkai forming a procession can also convey a message of unity and solidarity.



