The 22-year-old is back on the pitch - 15 years after a road accident left him with brain damage.
When keen footballer Callum Irvine was seven years old he was hit by a car and almost died.
The accident left him with permanent brain damage and as a result he had to quit the game he loved.
Mr Irvine, now 22, said his dream of playing football again had "finally come true" thanks to a new pan-disability team set up by his childhood club, Gomersal & Cleckheaton FC.
"It's football for everybody," he said "and I just want to play."
Following the accident in 2010 Callum spent six months in hospital at Leeds General Infirmary.
His mum Carly said seeing him in an induced coma was the worst day of her life.
"He'd just been playing football for Gomersal that morning, I remember he scored a hat-trick, and then a few hours later they're [doctors] telling me he won't survive the next 24 hours.
"It was a living nightmare."
Callum pulled through, but the accident left him with a significant brain injury limiting his cognitive development to around the mental age of a seven-year-old.
"One of the only things he's remembered since that day is football," Ms Irvine said.
"This club is so special to our family and to see him kicking a ball again after all these years is amazing."
Callum, who is a student at Springfield Sixth Form Centre in Dewsbury, has recently returned to Cleckheaton & Gomersal, after 15 years, to play with the new disability team.
Training takes place every week in Bradford and the sessions are for anyone who is unable to access mainstream football.
Some players have learning disabilities, while others have a mental health condition or a physical disability.
Gomersal & Cleckheaton coach Andrew Birkenshaw, who is also a learning disability nurse in Bradford, said the sessions were "absolutely the best part" of his week.
"Before we started this team there was nothing around here for young disabled people so all these kids were just at home doing nothing," he said.
"They are all amazing; the way they play and how they support each other."
The pan-disability sessions have been so popular the club is now looking to expand to include children as young as eight or nine.
Ms Irvine said playing with the team was the highlight of her son's week and that he "counted the sleeps" between sessions.
"This is the club he's always loved since he was six years old," she said.
"I can't even describe what it means to us to be back here and how proud I am of Callum.
"They said he'd never walk or talk again, and look at him; he's running with a ball!
"You can never say a young person with disabilities can't do something. They will prove you wrong."
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Category: General Sports