Read about our approach to external linking. From dressing room rows to success and failure on the pitch, it makes for gripping viewing. But as an up-and-coming team, Punjab United are lucky to get a few dozen spectators to their ground in Gravesend, Kent. Punjab United is a small team with big dreams as a BBC documentary, airing tomorrow, discovers. Punjab United is a small team with big dreams. Although the club is run and managed by British Sikhs, it is a community club welcoming and encouraging players from all backgrounds. The latest move by the broadcaster is expected to increase the visibility of the other Asian clubs and players looking to play. They have their own ground and some players are paid - but making their way in the fiercely competitive world of football is no easy task. Gravesend-based Punjab United will be appearing on BBC One, showing how the club was run last season and some of its matchday experiences. Punjab United's 2018–19 season is the subject of a BBC Documentary. They are the first team in the Gravesham borough to achieve this status. The latest move by the broadcaster is expected to increase the visibility of the other Asian clubs and players looking to play. Football may be a matter of life and death to some, but for non-league side Punjab United it’s far more important than that. Here we pay tribute to those who have died from the virus in Kent. After a successful couple of years with back to back promotions and cup victories, they find themselves in the Southern Counties East league. Punjab United - in red - in action this season Gravesend's Punjab United are the brainchild of local businessman Chipie Sian who built the club from the ground up - literally. But as an up-and-coming team, Punjab United are lucky to get a few dozen spectators to their ground in Gravesend, Kent. The club joined the Kent County League Premier Division in 2016, and in their inaugural season, they won the Kent Intermediate Challenge Cup. Listings service brought to you by KentOnline for local businesses who are offering services during the Coronavirus pandemic. He added: “I just think Chipie and his team’s success should be shared to the widest audience possible.”. The club has now grown significantly since it’s formation. “It’s been a tough season and I think the BBC should have some great footage of what it’s really like at this level and the commitment it takes to run a club.”. Gravesend has one of the largest Sikh communities in the UK. Punjab United have ambitions to be as successful as major clubs such as Newcastle United… The BBC follows Punjab United and Chipie as they are promoted to the Southern Counties East Football League. A behind the scenes documentary of a non-league football team is hitting screens next week. “Getting mic’d up every week was a bit weird at first but when the game kicks off you don’t worry about the cameras - it’s all about the game. They expect to continue their upwards trajectory but are shocked as they end up in a punishing battle against relegation. Copyright © 2020 Garavi Gujarat Publications Ltd & Garavi Gujarat Publications, Shahid Kapoor and Mrunal Thakur to resume the shooting of Jersey in October, ‘Hamilton Commission’: F1 champ pledges to boost diversity in motor racing, ‘No new pilot licenses please’: UN agency to Pakistan, India’s Hero MotoCorp may sell Harley-Davidson bikes in the country, Foreign students appeal for chance to clear names in 2014 cheating scandal, Karan Johar: Neither I nor Dharma Productions can be made responsible for what people do in their personal lives, ‘One world, one soul’: British Indian artist targets £24mn for charity with record-breaking work, Pakistan-born man held on terror charges after two wounded in cleaver attack outside former Charlie Hebdo offices, ‘Never blamed Anushka nor made sexist comment’: Sunil Gavaskar.