The muddy occasion when Yorkshire-born star Ed Sheeran returned to his home county on Friday claimed many victims.

Whilst most of the revellers at Leeds' Roundhay Park escaped with a thorough drenching and some mud-caked clothes, one concert-goer had a night to forget when she broke her leg.

Kim Usher, 45, a teacher, had travelled all the way up from Redhill, Surrey for the concert.

But her trip was ruined when she fractured her leg after slipping on one of the muddy slopes in the arena area.

She said: "You couldn't see where you were walking, it was too slippy.

"When we got to where the toilets were we started walking back up the other side, and as I walked back up I just slipped and fell over."

Kim says that she then heard her ankle pop.

"It was then a case of trying to get out," she said. 

"But there was no staff there at all. I had to move along with the other thousands of people that were trying to get out, and I couldn't walk.

"My boyfriend carried me as much as he could, but it was a fair walk to where the coaches were. 

"There was nobody official there at all to help." 

A member of the public rang a taxi for Kim, where she was able to get to hospital for treatment.

At 4am medics told her she had broken her leg, shattering pre-planned holiday arrangements to jet off with her children to the Med.

Speaking this afternoon, she said: "The really sad thing is I was meant to be flying last night to Crete with my kids, but we can't go because I can't fly."

Kim has been training for a duathlon, which will also no longer be possible, and as a teacher she may now miss the start of the next academic year.

The concert was the first high-profile gig at the park for years, and Kim feels more could have been done to make the site safer.

"I'm upset," she said. "We couldn't see anything. I love Ed Sheeran and I went up to see him at the Etihad last year, and I was so excited to get to Leeds.

"But when we got to Manchester at the Etihad there was so many support crew.

"There's no way this would have happened in a place like that, there was just nobody there to help.

"That's the upsetting thing that it was dangerous, it's ok if you put something down or solid ground to stand on, but there you were just in a mudbath."

We have contacted the concert promoter for comment.