soccer

Amputee football team wants to offer coaching base

Yahoo Sports

An amputee football team adopted by Cambridge City FC says a professional base would grow the sport.

Most players in the league are single leg amputees, while goalkeepers typically have an arm amputation [Courtesy of Cambridge City FC] An amputee football team manager said he hoped to create a permanent base to promote the sport. Duncan Rumbelow, who manages an amputee team adopted by Cambridge City FC, said he planned to offer taster sessions at the club's stadium in Sawston, but would like it to become a full-time base for amputees of all ages to benefit from professional training. The seven-a-side sport is played on crutches and operates on a national model, with players across the country coming together for fixtures held in Cheshire.

Izzy Papandronicou, a player in Rumbelow's mixed-gender team, said "travelling three to four hours" for football was "not ideal or great for growing the sport". Rumbelow, whose father Richard played for Cambridge City in the 1950s and went on to play for Cambridge United, said the Cambridge City FC Amputee Team was only one of four in the UK currently playing in the England Amputee Football Association (EAFA) league. The Cambridge team has members from as far away as Ireland, Newcastle and Portsmouth, as well as a few players closer to the city club.

And the other league clubs - Chelsea, Everton and Scottish team AFAS - also boast players from far and wide, forced to travel because there are so few opportunities to train with other amputees. In international competitions, outfield players are single-leg amputees and play without prosthesis, while goalkeepers are typically single-arm amputees. However, in domestic matches, players can play with or without prosthesis and arm amputees can play outfield.

There is no offside rule and kick-ins replace throw-ins. Papandronicou - an amputee Lioness - told BBC Radio Cambridgeshire : "The more bases we can get in different parts of the country, the bigger the sport will grow. " Manager Duncan Rumbelow said he wanted "a base here where we can promote the sport" [Tom Jackson/BBC] Cambridge City adopted the amputee team in February, which has given it "club identity" ahead of the Amputee Cup Final in June at St George's Park in Staffordshire, part of the Disability FA Cup.