Parents say the team has given children a massive confidence boost and helped them make friends.
A father who set up a football team for visually impaired children said it has "completely changed their lives".
Ryan Davison said he was searching for a "new purpose" after his son Isaac died aged four months in 2023, and he started the sessions at A1 Football Factory in Pontefract.
The team, which is supported by Wakefield Sight Aid, has since grown to 15 players, aged eight to 15, with Davison set to also offer pan-disability football from April.
He said: "I just want it to be full of kids of every ability who come down here, feel safe and just express themselves. I do feel I made my little boy proud by doing that."
Currently, the team trains every Sunday and it includes children who struggle with their peripheral vision or spatial awareness.
To help, the are equipped with bibs, different coloured balls and use verbal cues.
Davison said the children did not want to be treated differently, adding: "They just want to play football in a safe place."
He explained that a lack of opportunities in the local area inspired him to start the team when a father approached him to say that his visually impaired son had been turned away from playing grassroots football.
Davison's team not only brings children together to stay active, but has also helped their confidence grow.
"It has completely changed their lives," he said.
"The parents come up to us with tears in their eyes saying that they'll do PE now, they've made friends. It's an unbelievable thing that's happening down here."
Samantha Hayward-Bannister said her daughter did not normally "stick anything out" but absolutely loved the team.
"She's gone from being really unconfident to saying that her disability is now a superpower," she said.
"She's gone from not knowing anyone that - as she said - is like herself, to meeting all these kids - it just means so much."
Lyndsey Gomersall said her child would not have been able to play football anywhere else.
"I'm so proud of all of them, not just my child, all of them," she said.
"They are brilliant."
Hollie, 13, said she felt well supported in her team and has a strong sense of belonging.
"I actually kind of felt like I was alone, like I was the only one," she said.
"I thought if I joined this team, then I could actually find people like me."
Buddy, 13, said since joining the group Sundays have become the highlight of his week.
"It only comes once a week but when it comes, it's really good and I enjoy it loads," he said.
Hayley Grocock, the chief executive of Wakefield District Sight Aid, said the progress the children had made was "unreal".
"I've known some of these kids for quite a long time and to see how they have grown and how they have developed because they've been in an environment where they've been enabled and empowered to be the best that they can be, it's absolutely phenomenal," she said.
"The bonds that have been created are unlike anything I've ever seen - they are ride-or-die 100% there for each other and it's the most beautiful thing."
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Category: General Sports