Travis Zimmer

Travis Zimmer, a person using white cane is wearing black jumper and brown trousers. He is sitting on a chair in an angle and looking at the camera and smiling.

00:01 – 00:33

[Upbeat music plays. Background shows a film set where man takes a seat. He is using a white cane]

[On screen text: Travis Zimmer – GSA Team Member]

<v Travis >: My name is Travis Zimmer. I am very passionate about sport. Playing AFL Blind, I play Blind Cricket. And when I’m out there, it’s freedom, I don’t have to worry about anything else. I don’t really think about I’ve got a disability. It just gives me a sense of belonging, a sense of purpose, you know, provides that culture where, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s like a family. And I, I get a sense of freedom when I’m out in the middle playing Blind Cricket.

00:33 – 00:48

[Music continues. Travis is looking at the camera and speaking]

<v Travis >: We’re all friends off the field, but once we’re on the field, it’s, you know, go hammer and tong can, you know, we wanna beat ’em and, you know, you hit a four and you say, “Oh, did you did you see that?” But I then realise that, no, they didn’t really see it because they’re blind or low vision. So, you know, it’s a little bit of banter that way.

00:48 – 00:51

[Against a white background text appears, “We don’t fit into the system. We help rebuild it.]

00:52 – 01.03

[Music continues. Travis is looking at the camera and speaking]

<v Travis >: I mean, if I can change one person’s life in terms of pointing them in the right direction around inclusion, yeah, that’s a win.

01:04 – 01:06

[Scene transitions to show a white screen with black text that reads, “Creating a world where people with disability can just be.”]

01:06 – 01:09

[A yellow screen shows Get Skilled Access logo at the centre and the website at the bottom www.getskilledaccess.com.au.]

[Music fades away]

About Travis Zimmer

Travis Zimmer is an Inclusion Coach with Sport4All and an associate consultant with Get Skilled Access. Living with Usher Syndrome, which impacts both his hearing and vision, Travis channels his lifelong love of sport into creating more inclusive sporting communities.

He plays for the Victorian Blind Cricket Team and AFL Blind, where he finds freedom, purpose, and connection, a space where disability fades into the background and belonging takes centre stage. Travis’s story shows how inclusion in sport builds confidence, culture, and mateship, both on and off the field.

A man wearing glasses and a dark jumper sits on a stool, smiling at the camera and holding a white cane. The background is teal with faint outlines of a job application form. To his left, text reads, “I wish the worst part of job hunting was writing cover letters.” The GSA – Get Skilled Access logo appears at the bottom.

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