The Non-League Football Paper

FOOTBALL GAVE RYAN HOPE IN ADVERSITY

- By Joe Harvey

MARGATE FC have always been there for Ryan Day, even when life has tried to tear him away from the club he loves.

The 33-year-old has long been involved at Hartsdown Park, including a brief and impromptu stint as chief executive in his mid20s.

Day’s life was turned upside down in 2018 when he lost his sight, but that has not stopped him from continuing to devote his time to the Pitching In Isthmian Premier Division tier side, where he currently serves as director of communicat­ions.

It is a role in which he continues to inspire those around him with his dedication in the face of his disability, with Day proving nothing will hold him back from driving Margate forward.

“They have been fantastic,” Day said. “Even when I wasn’t at the club for a few years, they supported me, they stayed in touch. “Without blowing my own trumpet, I like to think that I inspire a group of people at Margate with the fact my health implicatio­ns don’t affect my love for the game.

“I do a lot of mental health work outside of the club and I am also an ambassador for the Blind Associatio­n in Kent.

“I think that inspires people and that is what

I want to do, and I am keen to not just talk about my situation, but show how football can be a release.”

Day spoke out after Internatio­nal Volunteer Day on December 5, and says he has nothing but positive things to say about his time helping out at Margate in roles replicated at Non-League clubs across the country, with opportunit­ies available to view via the Pitching In Volunteer Hub. A constant in his life through trials and tribulatio­ns, Margate’s former NLP correspond­ent believes the camaraderi­e and bond created by being involved with a sports team offers plenty.

“I would say to people that if you can get in at any football or sporting club, as a volunteer, it gives you so much satisfacti­on,” he added. “Whether that is a result on the pitch, the children enjoying the game, seeing a big crowd, there is so much emotion. That is what I love about football, it is such a high and low. “You ride it all out, but you ride it out as a team, as a club, it is not just about you, you are not there on your own. “You have volunteers around you and this amazing fan base. What I love about football and volunteeri­ng is that it brings people together from all walks of life with a common goal of winning a game.”

Find volunteeri­ng opportunit­ies at your local club by visiting https:// pitchingin volunteers. co.uk/

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 ?? ?? INSPIRATIO­N: Margate’s Ryan Day
INSPIRATIO­N: Margate’s Ryan Day

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