After a turbulent twenty years of yo-yoing between divisions, the future seems bright down on the South Coast for Brighton and Hove Albion who might just have found some stability - as well as a new permanent home.
The Seagulls flew the nest after inhabiting the infamous Withdean Stadium, an athletics ground that was supposed to be a short-term fix, for 12 years, leaving with the League One title.
They were top of the league from September and stayed there for the remainder of the season in Gus Poyet’s first full season in charge of the club.
This is Poyet’s first managerial post having been an assistant manager at Swindon and Leeds alongside Dennis Wise before being Juande Ramos’ right-hand man at his former club Tottenham.
The charismatic Uruguayan has overseen a remarkable turnaround at the Withdean having been given the job whilst the club was in the midst of a relegation scrap. Survival was the short-term target with promotion seen as a long term ambition.
However, Poyet’s transformation of Brighton into a side that is easy on the eye and play with flair, as you’d expect from someone who played the game in the way he did, has been done without spending millions.
Whilst purchases were made: club captain Gordon Greer arrived from Swindon for £250,000, chairman and boyhood Brighton fan Tony Bloom has kept spending to a minimum as he does not want the club to be spending money it simply does not have. A rarity in the modern-day game, some might say.
Inevitably, Poyet’s excellent work down on the South Coast has not gone unnoticed with reports linking him with other clubs cropping up in the press. A four-year contract signed only last summer means that Brighton would be owed a lot of money in compensation if Poyet were to leave but he has stated a desire to build a dynasty with the Seagulls.
Chairman Bloom, who has made his money through the business of property, succeeded Dick Knight in 2009, maintaining the Bloom family's association with the club - his grandfather, Harry, was vice-chairman during the 1970's; his uncle Ray is a director - and immediately set about taking the club to the top level.
Shortly after Bloom's takeover, planning permission was granted for a new stadium in Falmer.
The 41 year-old invested £93m into the development of the American Express Community Stadium (AMEX), which cost £105m, and has set aside a further £15m which will be spent on the building of a state of the art training ground and youth academy.
Promotion was achieved in time to arrive in Falmer as a Championship club, resulting in season ticket sales going through the roof.
Over 18,000 have been sold already with a waiting list already produced in preparation of a potential expansion of the capacity from 22,000 to 35,000 – a far cry from the 8,850 capacity Withdean which isolated fans from the players and vice versa.
The catchment area for Brighton to tap into is huge with thousands of potential fans out there within the 20.7 miles that lie between Albion and the nearest Football League club to them geographically – Crawley Town.
With this club on the up, fans young and old should come streaming through the turnstiles into the AMEX to see Poyet’s side attempt to get the club back into the top flight for the first time since 1983.
Huge credit for the upturn in fortunes that makes Premier League football a conceivable possibility for the South coast club has to go to Bloom. He made Premier League football the target, making ambition the buzzword at the AMEX.
With a young manager and a young side who work so well together, it’s difficult to give any reasons why Brighton don’t have a chance of making it out of the Championship by the door marked ‘Promotion’.
A lot of people see Brighton as dark horses for next season in the Championship, arguably the toughest league to predict in English football, and rightfully so.
Having won League One at a canter last season, they will aim to make the same sort of seamless transition to the next level that Norwich, Leeds and Millwall did in the previous campaign.
Maintaining the momentum gained from promotion is seen to be the one of the key ingredients to success in the Championship; the gulf in class between the Championship and League One isn’t quite as large as it is made out to be.
Although it was the FA Cup, in which anything can happen, Brighton did beat both Watford and Portsmouth last season - 1-0 and 3-1 respectively with the former result being away from home – to prove that they have the ability to mix it with sides from the Championship.
Beating off competition from Leicester City, who have every right to feel confident that their campaign will be successful, to sign the double-barreled hitman Craig Mackail-Smith for a club-record fee, shows that the Seagulls are a force to be reckoned with off the pitch and will hopefully be the same on it.
Wills Buckley and Hoskins have both arrived alongside Mackail-Smith to bolster the attacking options available to Poyet.
Hoskins joins with a point to prove after not living up to expectations with Watford at this level but 20 goals for a relegated Bristol Rovers side last season suggest that he has the assets to succeed with a team who should, theoretically, provide him with better service.
Buckley, a club record signing from Watford at the time, is seen as the replacement for Elliott Bennett, who left for Premier League pastures at Norwich. He impressed at Watford last season and will look to repeat the form that saw him touted as one of the best young players in the Championship.
Kazenga LuaLua returned to the club for his third loan spell this morning and could make the deal permanent in January. The management acknowledged his contribution to the promotion from League One last season and are keen to tie him down on a long-term deal when the opportunity arises in January.
Romain Vincelot has also checked in at the AMEX from Dagenham and Redbridge after 18 months of being courted by the Seagulls. His twelve goals weren’t enough to keep the Daggers in League One but, along with his versatility, it was enough to convince Poyet that he could be a valuable asset to the team.
It is a team which will look to compete in the division rather than settling for safety. Of course, survival is the primary aim but Brighton is a club with bigger plans. Perhaps a top-half finish would be realistic target for the forthcoming season with a play-off push the campaign after.
However, with Poyet and Bloom at the heart of the club, a top six push this season is not entirely out of the question and I, for one, would not be surprised if it were to materialise.