The Pilgrims is one of the oldest clubs in the English footballing circuit. Their latest estimated net worth is around $25.6 million, considering they are currently in the second division it’s quite good. Their primary sources of income are from sponsorships and matchday revenue, they are in partnership with Classic Builders, Bond Timber, Ginsters, Ward Williams, CT1, Bidfood, Retain Limited, St. Austell Brewery, Puma, Biffa, Hoteligent, and Applied Nutrition.
Puma is now the club’s apparel manufacturer. Bond Timber currently serves as the club’s primary sponsor. The club first started sponsoring shirts in 1983. Although it only lasted one season, Beacon Electrical was the first business to have its name on a Plymouth Argyle shirt. The following sponsor, Ivor Jones Insurance, had a two-year contract with the team.
The Argyle Football Club was established in 1886, and its inaugural game took place on October 16 against the Cornwall team Caxton, in which the Pilgrims defeated 2-0. In Launceston, where many of the club’s original members had received their education, Argyle defeated Dunheved College (now Launceston College) 2-1 later that week to win for the first time.
Plymouth Argyle team traveled to South America in the summer of 1924 to play exhibition football in Uruguay and Argentina. After defeating Uruguay 4–0 in the opening match, the nation that won the inaugural World Cup six years later; Argyle pulled off another surprise victory by defeating Argentina 1-0. Then, Argyle managed to hold Boca Juniors, the Argentine powerhouse, to a respectable 1-1 draw.
Before the 1992–93 season, English football transformed. Division Two (second tier) changed to Division One, Division Three (third tier) to Division Two, the Premiership from the First Division (top tier), and so on. Consequently, Argyle remained in Division Two, but in the third tier rather than the second.