Peacehaven Wild Kids
Well-known member
Thing is, we’ll never know.
A bit like, what if Smith DID score?
A bit like, what if Smith DID score?
Luton are an interesting case. We don't think of them as a 'big' club but from 1937 until 2001 they'd only spent five seasons outside the top two divisions. They reached the FA Cup final and won the League Cup (and were runners-up) so they're not exactly Accrington Stanley or Newport County.Luton Town took 5 seasons.They'd been in the top flight not long before.
And maybe they would have stuck to that. It would have been a huge shout though. We'd have been a one team fiscal stimulus for most of the other sides in the league.The Conference made it absolutely clear throughout the 96/97 season that under no circumstances whatsoever would BHAFC be allowed to play in it during the 97/98 season without a "home ground".
Who were the 17 absolute snakes? I hope they are all in the conference or lower nowWe wouldn't have been admitted as we had no ground, there is no reckoning.
As it was, we had to survive a vote by the league clubs to stay in the league. We survived by 47-17.
Football: Saved Brighton to share New Den
A vote of club chairmen yesterday saved Brighton from being expelled from the Football League - and the club then celebrated by confirming plans to ground share with Millwall.www.independent.co.uk
Oldham was definitely oneWho were the 17 absolute snakes? I hope they are all in the conference or lower now
When we played them up there that season they had a fat bloke in goal… it turned out he was the ‘keeper from the owners local pub team.Luckily Doncaster were even worse. IIRC the worst bottom division points tally in football league history, to this day. Their owner literally hired park football players for £50 a week.
Well thats one with a dose of karma!Oldham was definitely one
Why didn't we go to Millwall ? It would have been a better option.Who were the 17 absolute snakes? I hope they are all in the conference or lower now
The other 16 were PalaceOldham was definitely one
Leyton Orient was anotherOldham was definitely one
We wouldn't have had a home ground of our own, would we have found it easy to find somewhere to a) play, and b) be able to generate enough income to break even, (we were in a predicament that let the clubs we approached to ground share dictate how much they charged us, and could exploit that need with high rental costs).HKFC does.
I didn't suggest you were lying. I understand that was the Conference's stance at the time. That doesn't mean it couldn't have been worked out, I'm sure it could have been had we been relegated.
A bit like the "It is absolutely impossible for the Albion to ever have a stadium anywhere other than Falmer ever ever ever" stance.
Were they newly homeless too? with no clue where they would be playing their matches the following season?Took Doncaster 5 seasons to get back up, and then they won the League 2 title the first year back. They were in a worse state than we were when they went down.
Would we?And maybe they would have stuck to that. It would have been a huge shout though. We'd have been a one team fiscal stimulus for most of the other sides in the league.
We'll never know anyway
In response to the original question posed, i'd have expected us to have been wound up and gone out of business.Where do you think the Albion would be now?
I think this is going to be an unpopular opinion, but I think we would be in pretty much the same position we are currently in.
After we were relegated we were playing in front of 1-2000 people at Priestfield- would that have really been any lower had we been in the Conference? Would the running costs have been any higher, and was there a big difference in revenue from being in the 4th Division to the Conference? Our squad was Conference level and we were paying Conference wages, so would it have changed that much?
Then the return to Brighton would have galvanised a lot of excitement and interest, and I think we would have still been getting those crowds at Withdean, and I think we would still have been able to attract the likes of Micky Adams. By the time we were back at Withdean we had one of the biggest budgets in the division, if I remember correctly. Getting out of the Conference with a budget like that would have been relatively straightforward. Assuming promotion from the Conference in the first season at Withdean, we'd have gone into the 2nd season there in the 4th tier. The team that got up from the Conference regularly went straight up from the 4th tier in those days, which takes us to the 3rd season at Withdean in the 3rd tier, and bang on track with what actually happened.
There would still have been Dick Knight, and still have been Tony Bloom, and I think we would still be somewhere around where we are today.
The alternative scenario has us going bust in the Conference. But I'm not sure why we would have, and if we had the fans would 100% have created a Phoenix team, presumably with Knight and eventually Bloom on board. It took Wimbledon 9 years to get back in the League, and I assume we would have done it in similar. Even that scenario only has us back in tier 4 in 2006, rather than tier 3 where we actually were. Even if we had gone bust, I still think we'd currently be in Hughton relegation battle years.
Thoughts?