Home   Ashford   Sport   Article

Ashford United's disability section plan to increase number of teams from two to five in time for next season to meet demand

By Faye Hackwell

Ashford United Football Club’s disability section is expanding to meet demand.

The club currently have two under-11s disability teams but so many families have asked for spaces, there are plans to add a third under-11s team and two new teams for 11-to-13-year-olds and 13-to-16-year-olds next season.

Ashford disability players were mascots for the first team's game against Chatham last month. Picture: Ian Scammell
Ashford disability players were mascots for the first team's game against Chatham last month. Picture: Ian Scammell

The squad was set up by coach Daniel Ambler last summer, after he experienced his eight-year old autistic son, Jack, not being passed to in training sessions or getting game time with another local team.

“I posted on Facebook asking if there was any interest in setting up a disability team in Ashford as the nearest one was in Maidstone and my phone didn’t stop ringing for two to three weeks,” Ambler said.

“I expected four or five when I set the team up and we’ve ended up with 17 - and all 17 are still with us.”

The Avengers and Assassins - whose team names were chosen by the players themselves - play in the Kent Disability Football League, which consists of 50 teams from 14 clubs based across Kent and South East London.

All teams in their division span the eight-to-11-year old age group and, rather than play matches weekly, the whole division meets once a month at Abbey School in Faversham for a festival-style day.

The 17 players are split across the two teams and each child receives equal game time during matches.

They play in the pan-disability division, with some of the players having autism and ADHD and some having physical disabilities, including one who uses a walking frame.

Many of the parents say that whatever their child’s reason for playing in the disability team, the squad provides a place where all players are accepted for who they are and treated equally.

For eight-year old Eddie Mustafa, who is autistic, the team provides somewhere he feels comfortable playing and has made friends.

Mustafa spent the first four months of his life in hospital after he was born prematurely at 26 weeks and he had to have major surgery to rebuild his skull as a baby after being diagnosed with craniosynostosis - a condition that caused the bones in his skull to fuse together too early.

Eddie’s team-mate Kade Clarke is the team’s "unofficial team medic" - a role he has taken an interest in as he suffers from epileptic seizures.

Clarke, eight, always has a medical bag with him during training sessions and matches and enjoys assisting with any injuries suffered by his team-mates.

To mark the end of their first season, they are organising a squad day out to Knockhatch Adventure Park near Eastbourne at Easter and have raised £2,500 through a raffle and donations to fund the day.

Assassins and Avengers: Jack Ambler, Layton McPhee, Kade Clarke, Freddie Cox, Tyler Large, Charlie Lord, Kenzie Cowley, Eddie Mustafa, Freddie Miah, Henry Smith, Teddy Bryant, Ethan Job, Elias Shepherd, Brodie Bedwell, Charlie Corrigan, James Wayland, Ollie Wayland.

Close This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies.Learn More