'I'm 16, have one leg and play football for England'
- Published
A 16-year-old striker for England's World Cup-bound amputee women's football team says scoring goals brings the same buzz as it would if she had two legs.
Explaining how a love of goals never left her despite losing a limb, Annabel Kiki pledged to score as many as possible in Colombia next month.
But until Tuesday morning, she didn't even know whether the team could afford to go to the inaugural World Cup for their sport.
An online fundraising campaign launched in July, which set a target of £50k, was only about halfway there until the team's appearance on BBC Breakfast on Monday. Since then, the target has been surpassed overnight.
Ms Kiki, from Cannock, Staffordshire, said: "We were on £24k literally a day ago, and within that time we have reached our goal.
"I honestly cannot believe it, I think I'm in shock."
The World Amputee Football Federation Women's World Cup takes place in Baranquilla, Colombia, between 4 and 10 November.
The England Amputee Football Association's, external fundraising aimed to cover costs, with any surplus going towards maintaining the women's programme in the future.
Ms Kiki told BBC Breakfast the squad's group chat was "blowing up" on Monday as donations came rolling in.
"I get a bit emotional because we've been working up to this for so long and every girl on that team deserves this," she said.
"I just want to say a massive thank you to everybody who's donated because you got us to this World Cup."
Ms Kiki said former captain of England and Chelsea's men's teams John Terry had also been in touch with the Lionesses to arrange a tour of Stamford Bridge, where the squad would meet Chelsea players.
"I'm going to try and get as much advice [from them] as possible because we are going to bring [the cup] home," she said.
The 16-year-old, who is also a model and keen skier, had an amputation following a diagnosis of bone cancer at 13.
She said she had been playing football since she was seven, and wondered whether the operation might prevent her from continuing.
She explained: "I never thought I would play again after my amputation, but when I found amputee football... when I'm on that pitch and I score a goal the adrenaline is exactly the same as it would be if I had two legs."
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- Published27 July