Prostate United | Help save lives with your club
Prostate United | Help save lives with your club

Join Prostate United this October

Calling all football fans! Sign up to walk, run or cycle every day in October and help save men’s lives. Represent your club alongside the kit men, physios and maybe even your  gaffer. Why? Because prostate cancer kills one man every 45 minutes - that’s half a football match. 

Whether you’re part of a team or going solo, you won’t be alone. Join your club, track your progress on Strava, and connect with other fans on Facebook, WhatsApp and X. Cheer each other on right up to the final whistle. 

Every activity you complete and every pound you raise helps fund lifesaving research into better tests and treatments to save men’s lives. Let’s do this!

Choose your challenge

It wouldn't be a fundraiser without a challenge, right? Whether on foot or by bike, pick your distance for this October. It’s your challenge, so feel free to mix up the activities. Here’s a guide to get you started:

🚶 Walk: 3km a day or 5km a day

🏃‍♀️ Run: 5km a day or 10km a day

🚲 Cycle: 10km a day or 25km a day

Your fundraising, rewarded

Black t-shirt with PCUK logo

Man of Men t-shirt

Sign up and receive our t-shirt. Wear it proudly during your daily activities to show your support and raise awareness of the most common cancer in men.

Black water bottle with PCUK logo

Water bottle

Raise £300 and score a water bottle to keep you hydrated throughout the month.

Black and blue football jersey

Prostate United shirt

Hit that magic £500 target and you’ll receive our football jersey. Now you can represent Prostate United from the pitch, the stands, the sofa, and the pub.

How your money makes a difference

£100

Could enable us to provide essential printed information to 1,000 men facing a diagnosis of prostate cancer.

£400

Could pay for one MRI scan, allowing researcher to look inside a man and examine his prostate without the need for a biopsy.

£500

Could cover the cost of analysing 50 men’s blood samples. This could help our researchers identify their genetic risk of prostate cancer.

Our supporters