In 1935—thirteen years after a meeting above "The Ideal Milk Bar" in
Campsie led to the creation of the Canterbury-Bankstown Junior Rugby League—the Canterbury club was admitted into the elite New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership. It took the new club, nicknamed "Country Bumpkins" because of their rural recruiting and CB emblem, four years to win their first premiership in
1938. The grand final-winning effort was repeated in
1942 before a 38-year premiership drought. In
1967, having ended the 11-year premiership reign of
St. George by defeating them in the final, "The Berries" (as they were known at the time) lost to
South Sydney in the grand final. But the return to the top end of the table set the scene for off-field restructuring that laid the foundations for the club to become one of the most consistent achievers in the remaining decades of the 20th century. In 1978, Canterbury became known as "The Bulldogs". Nicknames such as "Cantabs" "CBs" and "Berries" were seen to be "soft" and the club wanted something to signify determination and grit. The new name and logo was purchased from a local Sydney Liquor Store owner Bill Caralis. A grand final appearance in
1979, followed by a grand final win in
1980 with a young, enthusiastic and free-running side dubbed "The Entertainers", was the beginning of a golden era that was to produce three more grand final wins in the 1980s:
1984,
1985 and
1988. artwork During the mid-1990s'
Super League war, Canterbury aligned themselves with the Super League competition, playing in the
1997 premiership season. In
1998 the Bulldogs came close to adding another premiership trophy after qualifying for the grand final where they met the
Brisbane Broncos and lost 38–12. On the way to the 1998 Grand Final, Canterbury had two come-from-behind wins. The first was against the Newcastle Knights in the third week of the finals—behind 16–0 in the second half, they fought back to 16 all at full time and went on to win in extra time. A week later they trailed arch rivals Parramatta in the preliminary final by 16 points with 9 minutes remaining. Three tries and a conversion from the sideline by
Daryl Halligan in the final minutes got them back level at 18 all and send the game into extra-time. Canterbury eventually went on to win 32–20 in one of the greatest finals comebacks in the history of the game. Following indifferent form in 1999, 2000 and 2001 where they had varying levels of success, the club was found to have systematically and deliberately breached the NRL
salary cap in 2002 (for the 2001–02 seasons), and was penalised all 37 competition points which it had amassed up to that point for 2002. This resulted in the club falling from first to last place on the ladder, and at the end of the season the Bulldogs received their first "wooden spoon" (a reference to the club which finishes last in the competition) since
1964. The Bulldogs returned to finals contention in
2003; however, they fell one step short of yet another grand final after losing to the Roosters 28–18 in the preliminary final. The club went through some off-field dramas in 2004, the most serious of which included rape allegations during a pre-season match in
Coffs Harbour. The team managed to focus on football and triumphed when they held out the
Sydney Roosters 16–13 with a try-saving tackle by
Andrew Ryan in the dying seconds of the 2004 Grand Final. The game was to be the last for departing captain
Steve Price, but he missed the match due to a leg injury. Price is now taking over at the club as the General Manager of Football, this position becoming effective in 2020 as he looks to turn the club's fortunes around to that of 2004.
2005 saw Canterbury unable to mount a serious defence of their premiership title as injuries and contract negotiations saw the year start and finish on a sour note for the club. Due to the extent of injuries suffered, the team was under-strength for most of the year. This took its toll in the final six weeks of the season, with the club suffering successive heavy losses and missing the finals series. In
2006, little was expected from the club after a poor 2005 season, but despite some doubt over the strength of their side, Canterbury's forward pack helped them to a better than expected result for the year, finishing a game short of the grand final, losing to eventual premiers the
Brisbane Broncos. Inconsistency and a poor finish to the
2007 season meant Canterbury were knocked out of the finals in week two. In
2008, having already lost
Mark O'Meley to the Sydney Roosters,
Willie Mason left the club. Further into the off-season Canterbury-Bankstown also lost halfback
Brent Sherwin, and prospects for the
2008 NRL season began to look dim. Although they recorded at the start of the season a couple of victories, the injury toll and the departure
Sonny Bill Williams mid-season demoralised the club and players, and the Canterbury club earned their second wooden spoon of the decade. Another source of discontent in 2008 was the battle for election to the football club board. Many contenders believed that the board of the time was steering the club in the wrong direction, particularly then-
CEO Malcolm Noad. New members were elected to the board early in 2008, and later in the season Noad resigned as CEO. His replacement as head of the football club was
Todd Greenberg. Greenberg's influence became apparent during the
2009 season. Premiership-winning coach Steve Folkes was replaced with his assistant
Kevin Moore. The purchases of several key players, including former Melbourne and Cronulla playmaker
Brett Kimmorley changed Canterbury from a poorly run and poorly performing club to one of the best clubs both on and off the field in 2009. Canterbury finished second in the regular season (losing the minor premiership to the
St. George Illawarra Dragons due to a loss of two competition points for an interchange breach against
Penrith in Round 2), and players and officials took out a number of Dally M awards. 2009 was also the final season for
Hazem El Masri, who became the highest all-time pointscorer in Australian rugby league history with a penalty goal in the Bulldogs' Round 1 match against the
Manly Warringah Sea Eagles. From
2010, Canterbury returned to the name Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs. The Canterbury club celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2010. In the
2012 NRL season, Canterbury finished first on the competition ladder to take out their first minor premiership since 1994. They made it to the grand final, losing to Melbourne 14–4. In May 2013, former Netball New Zealand chief executive Raelene Castle was appointed CEO, the first female in the NRL's history. They finished the regular season sixth on the ladder and bowed out in the semi-final. In 2014, Canterbury made history by winning three consecutive games by one point, from Round 5 to Round 7. They finished runners up to
South Sydney in the
2014 NRL Grand Final. Canterbury reached the grand final after winning three sudden death finals matches against Melbourne, Manly-Warringah and Penrith. On 10 August 2017, Canterbury announced Rugby League World Cup CEO Andrew Hill as the replacement for outgoing boss Raelene Castle. On the appointment, chairman Ray Dib noted that "Andrew was appointed from a very strong list of candidates and has exceptional experience in the game of rugby league." In September 2017, Canterbury announced that former premiership winning player
Dean Pay would be the new coach at the club starting in 2018. The
2018 NRL season started off badly for Canterbury with the club only winning 3 of its first 10 matches. In May 2018, the new Canterbury board admitted that they would not be able to make any major signings until the end of the 2021 season due to the salary cap drama engulfing the club. The issue with the salary cap problems involved the previous administration and former coach
Des Hasler who signed numerous players on back ended deals. In the wake of the scandal, the club was forced to offload players to free up room in the cap. This resulted in
Moses Mbye departing for the
Wests Tigers and star recruit
Aaron Woods being sold to Cronulla after only signing with Canterbury months prior. On 16 June 2018, Canterbury suffered a humiliating 32–10 loss to the
Gold Coast Titans at Belmore, in the press conference coach Dean Pay said "Physically, we just weren't good enough. The way they turned up, the way they trained during the week wasn't good enough, I feel sorry for the fans". On 20 July 2018, Canterbury played against arch rivals Parramatta in what the media had dubbed as the "Spoon Bowl" with both sides sitting at the bottom of the ladder. There were fears before the game that the match would attract the lowest NRL crowd in over 20 years. Parramatta went on to win the match 14–8. After the defeat by Parramatta, Canterbury were facing the prospect of finishing with the wooden spoon for the first time since 2008 but over the coming four weeks the club managed to pull off upset wins against the
Wests Tigers, the
Brisbane Broncos and St. George to finish the season in 12th place. The lower grades of Canterbury performed better in 2018 with the club winning the
NSW Cup, defeating Newtown 18–12 in the final and also winning the
NRL State Championship defeating Redcliffe 42–18. Canterbury started off the
2019 NRL season losing their two first games in convincing fashion against the
Warriors and rivals Parramatta. Due to the bad start to the season, there were rumours that coach
Dean Pay would be relieved of his duties but he was then granted a 12-month contract extension to remain as Canterbury coach until the end of 2020. By the mid of the 2019 season, Canterbury found themselves sitting last on the table and in real danger of finishing with the wooden spoon. However, for the third straight season, Canterbury achieved four upset victories in a row over
Penrith, the
Wests Tigers,
South Sydney and
Parramatta who were all competing for a place in the finals series and were higher on the table. Pay was credited with the late season revival as the side focused heavily on defence. In the
2020 NRL season, Canterbury were defeated in both of their opening fixtures. The season was then temporarily postponed. Following the season resumption, they were defeated by
Manly-Warringah at
Central Coast Stadium. They then defeated the
St George Illawarra Dragons 22–2 at
Western Sydney Stadium. After round 9, they have not won a game. They were defeated in round 9 by the
Brisbane Broncos at
Lang Park 26–8. The speculation that then Head Coach
Dean Pay would be sacked grew. By Tuesday 14 July 2020, Canterbury released a statement saying that
Pay had resigned from his position. In this statement, the club announced that
Pay's assistant coach
Steve Georgallis would take over the role. Following this, it was reported that
Dean's other assistant, Steve Antonelli, also resigned from his position. The clubs
NSW Cup head coach Brad Henderson would fill in as
Georgallis's assistant coach. On Wednesday 22 July 2020, the club announced that they had secured the services of former
Manly Warringah Sea Eagles head coach and current (at 22 July 2020)
Penrith Panthers assistant coach,
Trent Barrett to coach the club from the start of season 2021 on a three-year deal. Canterbury finished the
2020 NRL season in 15th place on the table after a horror year on and off the field. Canterbury finished on equal points with
Brisbane but avoided the wooden spoon due to a slightly better for and against record. Canterbury started the
2021 NRL season poorly losing their opening three matches including being kept scoreless in round 2 & round 3 against Penrith and Brisbane respectively. This was the first time in the club's history that this had occurred. In round 4 of the
2021 NRL season, Canterbury were defeated 38-0 by
South Sydney in the traditional
Good Friday game. Canterbury became only the second team in the
NRL era to lose three straight games without scoring a point after Cronulla who achieved this in the
2014 NRL season. It was also the worst start to a season by any team since Glebe in the
1928 NSWRFL season who managed to only score 12 points in their first four matches. On 30 June 2021, Canterbury were fined $50,000 by the
NRL after failing to communicate the increased COVID restrictions to players. The incident was in relation to five Canterbury players visiting Sydney's Eastern Suburbs which was a
COVID-19 hotspot. In round 16 of the
2021 NRL season, Canterbury suffered their third heaviest defeat in club history losing 66–0 to
Manly-Warringah at
Western Sydney Stadium. In round 22 of the
2021 NRL season, Canterbury were handed their sixth
wooden spoon after losing 24–10 against the
Warriors. Canterbury needed to win the match and their remaining three fixtures to avoid finishing last. Despite a number of off-season recruits, Canterbury started the
2022 NRL season poorly winning only two of their first ten matches. On 16 May 2022, Canterbury head coach Trent Barrett resigned from his position with the club sitting bottom of the table. On 18 May 2022, Michael Potter was named as interim coach of the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs after the resignation of Barrett. Under Potter, the club won five of their last 14 matches to avoid the wooden spoon by finishing 12th. In round 18 of the
2023 NRL season, Canterbury suffered their equal third worst loss as a club when they were defeated 66-0 by
Newcastle. Canterbury would finish the 2023 NRL season in 15th place. The club also finished with the worst for and against out of all 17 teams with a -331 points differential. In the
2024 NRL season, Canterbury qualified for the finals finishing 6th on the table. This was the first time in eight years that the club had managed to achieve this. However, they lost their elimination finals match 24-22 against Manly at Stadium Australia. Canterbury started the
2025 NRL season in great form winning their opening six games and equalling their best start to a campaign since 1938. In round 8, the club suffered their first loss of the year against Brisbane which ended with a score line of 42-18. Canterbury affirmed their premiership credentials in round 10, registering their biggest comeback since 2001, winning 32-20 from 20-0 down at half-time, away at the
Canberra Raiders, who went on to be the season's Minor Premiers. Other notable wins came in Round 11 against the Sydney Roosters, and in round 21 against Manly, where Canterbury defeated them 42-4 at
Sydney Football Stadium (2022) as they commemorated their 1995 Premiership triumph. Following a 28-4, round 26 victory over the
Penrith Panthers, Canterbury confirmed their spot in the Top Four for the 2025 season. Locking in a 3rd place finish, Canterbury achieved their first Top Four finish since their Minor Premiership in 2012. The club would lose their two finals matches against Melbourne and Penrith as they were eliminated from the finals in straight sets. The year was highlighted by the ongoing saga with new recruit
Lachlan Galvin who signed mid-season from the Wests Tigers with starting halfback Toby Sexton being replaced by Galvin in the team along with hooker Reed Mahoney being told he was free to leave at the end of 2025. ==Name and emblem==