Sutton U-11s A Team includes Ethan Sanderson, Sam Prattsa, Sam Birks, Charlie Rhioes, Luke Silborn, Tom Storrie, Danny Skelton, Peter Stoney, Liam Sullivan, James Dale, Jack Wrigglesworth, and Callum Leng.
Two teams from Sutton Juniors will be heading to Holland in May thanks to a massive fund-raising effort.
A total of 51 people representing Sutton U-11s A and B squads, will be leaving by coach on Friday, May 23, to stay in Lumenburg.
The Sutton teams will play two friendlies on the Saturday and then take part in a tournament on the Sunday, including an Academy team from PSV Eindhoven.
Craig Sanderson, manager of the Sutton U-11s A team, said both teams will also go a tour of PSV Eindhoven's ground on the Saturday afternoon.
The matches for Sutton Juniors have been organised by the England FA.
However the club have managed to come up with the money for the trip through a fund-raising campaign which has seen the club raise more than £7,000.
advertisement
Sanderson said £3,500 has been raised through sponsorship, £3,200 from bag packings at Sainsbury's in Keighley and Morrisons in Skipton and another £600 from a raffle.
The two teams, who play their games at Sutton Park, are sponsored by JN Bentley of Skipton and Cross Hills company WarmFloors.
Sutton U-11s B team includes Joseph Horsfall, Charlie Lister, Jack Macjebit, Jack Tink, Joseph Keough, Joseph Topple, Joe Arbarba, Johnny Hardaker, Jordan Yearwood, Lewis Rushton, Ross Davis, Oliver (surname unavailable) and Elliott (surname unavailable).
Sanderson said the club has a total of 120 players, whose age groups range from U-7s to U-16s. The U-7s to U-11s play seven-a-side and U-12s to U-16s play 11-a-side.
Sanderson's U-11s A team have lost only one game in the Keybury League this season, winning 11 and drawing one. The U-11s B side are mid-table in their division.
The club will be drawing raffle prizes at Eastburn Inn on Saturday, March 8, at 8pm.
Special guests could include Peter Armitage of Coronation Street and Ian Bleasdale of Casualty.
If you liked this article and would like to share it with others on the web who might be searching for good content we've made it easy for you to do it.
At the bottom of all articles, you'll see links to six sites. These sites - commonly called 'social bookmark' or 'social news' sites - have large communities of web users who share and rate interesting, useful and fun things on the web.
Clicking the links will automatically add the address of the story you are reading to one of these sites, letting you share it with others. Each site will ask you to register to share stories. Registration is free and once a member, you can store, recommend and search for stories that interest you.